This application is the US national phase of PCT application PCT/EP2007/004547, filed 23 May 2007, published 13 Dec. 2007 as WO2007/140878A1, and claiming the priority of German patent application 102006026580.7 itself filed 8 Jun. 2006, whose entire disclosures are herewith incorporated by reference.
The invention relates to an injection-molding nozzle, in particular a hot-runner nozzle, for use in an injection-molding injector having, depending on configuration, a relatively large number of plates, and having on its fixed side at least one mounting or mold-clamping plate and one distribution plate, and on its mold side at least one mold plate forming a mold cavity into which the nozzle tip opens, the hot-runner nozzle being provided with a housing collar, a concentric material tube being provided with a flow passage for a molten material opening into a nozzle tip, and having connections for a heating element and temperature sensor.
Such an injection-molding nozzle is known from DE 195 42 237 [U.S. Pat. No. 5,507,634], which is provided as a hot-runner nozzle having an integrated electric heating element, and having a central borehole as a flow passage for conveying the thermoplastic melt to the nozzle tip and then into the cavity of a cooled mold or a separable mold block having the mold cavity provided in a mold plate. The mold plate may form multiple mold cavities, and the injection mold may be correspondingly provided with multiple injection-molding nozzles.
The hot-runner nozzle comprises an elongated central body seated in a one-piece outer collar or a flange housing provided with a flange part as housing collar. The central body comprises, on its elongated central shaft part on its rear end, another flange or housing collar that is shaped like a cloverleaf and engages positively into the correspondingly contoured housing collar or flange of the outer collar or of the flange housing. The injection nozzle constructed in this manner by insertion into each other is placed with the rear flange or housing collar into a seat in a plate on the hot tool side and screwed down.
Another embodiment of such a hot-runner nozzle known from EP 0 528 315 [U.S. Pat. No. 5,312,241] consists of a rather broad flange body provided with lateral electrical connections that is extended as a narrow shaft through which a material tube heated from the outside extends. This shaft has several parts including an outer casing tube with an upper collar for contacting upon insertion into a mold-cavity plate. The material tube with the flow passage emptying into nozzle tips is designed on its rear end with a shoulder-like outer collar via which the material tube is connected to the flange body or tubular flange housing by welding where it contacts front surfaces lying on each other. A cap placed over the extending shoulder piece of the jacket tube forms the rear closure of this hot-runner nozzle.
In a hot runner-or cold runner nozzle used in injection-molding tools and known from DE 100 04 072 [U.S. Pat. No. 6,805,549], in order to supply a fluent mass at a preset temperature under high pressure to a separable tool block (mold cavity), the nozzle body comprises at least one substantially planar level lateral surface to which an surface heating and/or cooling apparatus is attached.
The object of the invention is to create a generic injection nozzle, especially a hot-runner nozzle, that has a simple construction and makes possible an easy installation into and removal from the molding tool.
The invention solves this problem in that the jacket tube is connected on its rear end via a limited longitudinal section of its outer surface in one piece to the flange housing on its inner surface. Thus, the material tube and the flange housing no longer need to be inserted into one another or joined to one another but rather there is a solid compact unit during installation and removal.
As a consequence of the connection, in accordance with a preferred embodiment of the invention by pressing the material tube against the hollow-body flange housing, of these structural parts at the site of this action, that is, where the outer surface of the material tube and the inner surface of the throughgoing hole of the flange housing rest concentrically on one another, a very narrow construction can be achieved that requires no rear collar or housing collar, shoulder piece or the like and requires no additional positive engagement or positive seat. The compact nozzle unit requires for insertion and removal merely the loosening of the plug connections for the heating and/or cooling and optional temperature measuring sensors in order to be able to be removed from or fitted to the plates of the injection-molding tool.
The compact construction is furthermore favored by the fact that according to the invention the material tube is of uniform cross-section without offsets from its front end on the nozzle side to its rear end fitted with the flange housing. Thus, the dimensions of the compact nozzle unit with the material tube extending continuously in a uniform manner are determined solely by the outside diameters of the material tube to be maintained conditioned by the requirements and of the flange housing concentrically surrounding the latter, pressing on the rear end. The term without offsets denotes here that for the pressing in of the material tube into the flange housing in the seat area a narrower tolerance is maintained over its length than in the other area of the material tube and a minimal spacing (less than 1/10 mm) is provided that ensures a defined pressing-in depth of the material tube in the flange housing. This also applies in a comparable manner to the front sealing area of the material tube.
Instead of designing the one-piece housing composite by a force fit by pressing the material tube into the flange housing, the invention suggests as an alternative that these structural parts be soldered together at the limited, determined longitudinal section or welded together, the latter from the flush closing front sides on the circumferential impact joint between the material tube and the flange housing.
An embodiment of the invention provides for the improvement of the temperature management that the flange housing consists of titanium.
Other features and details of the invention are seen from the following description of an embodiment of the invention shown in the drawings.
An injection molder 1 shown in the drawing comprises multiple plates on its fixed back side I, and on its front mold side II has a separable mold block together with a pair of mold parts 2 forming a mold cavity 3 (see
The injection or hot-runner nozzle 7 is fitted with a housing collar 11 into a seat 12 of the intermediate plate 6, which seat is open to the front in the injection direction 10. The seat 12 merges with a throughgoing hole 13 through which a rear housing end 14 of the hot-runner nozzle 7 projects rearward for connection to the distributor plate 5. The rear housing end 14 is provided with a seal in the form of a circumferential sealing bead 15 that fit tightly into the throughgoing hole 13 of the seat 12 of the intermediate plate 6. Plug connections with a lateral feed for a heater and a temperature measuring sensor 16 and 17 are provided.
The hot-runner nozzle 7 shown in the illustrated embodiment according to
The material tube 20 is constructed continuously without offsets starting from its front end on the nozzle side terminating flush at its front end with the flange housing 18, and is connected in one piece at its rear end via a limited longitudinal section 21 by a force fit 22 to the flange housing 18. This is achieved by pressing the outer surface of the material tube 22 in and pressing with the inner surface of the housing bore of the flange housing 18 resting over limited longitudinal section 21. This creates a small compact unit, and for insertion into or removal from the injection-molding tool merely the plug connections for heating and temperature measuring sensors 16 and 17 need to be loosened or connected. The hot-runner nozzle can therefore be mounted as a single unit in a simple manner.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
10 2006 026 580 | Jun 2006 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/EP2007/004547 | 5/23/2007 | WO | 00 | 12/5/2008 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2007/140878 | 12/13/2007 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
4557685 | Gellert | Dec 1985 | A |
5135377 | Gellert | Aug 1992 | A |
5312241 | Gunther | May 1994 | A |
5507635 | Gellert | Apr 1996 | A |
6009616 | Gellert | Jan 2000 | A |
6162043 | Gellert | Dec 2000 | A |
7462030 | Fischer | Dec 2008 | B2 |
20030003188 | Guenther | Jan 2003 | A1 |
20100297283 | Guenther | Nov 2010 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
2002525221 | Aug 2002 | JP |
2004521778 | Jul 2004 | JP |
2005297566 | Oct 2005 | JP |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20100297283 A1 | Nov 2010 | US |