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Injection Molding Firm Steinwall Goes Bioplastics

Steinwall has put years of R&D into learning to design and mold with biopolymers and natural-fiber reinforcements. Now that groundwork is beginning to pay off.

When the bioplastics revolution comes, Steinwall will be ready. “Market acceptance is still in the early stages,” says Jeremy Dworshak, director of business development for Steinwall, Inc., a $25 million custom injection molder in the Minneapolis suburb of Coon Rapids.

“However, we and others in the industry are at a mid-level understanding of product performance and processing with these materials.”

The firm has put about five years of R&D into working with biobased PLA resins and natural fibers from sources such as wood, flax, hemp, rice hulls, coconut and agave (the cactus from which tequila is made). “We’ve learned some critical things,” says Dworshak.

Some of that knowledge was shared at last month’s SPE ANTEC in Detroit, where Dworshak co-authored a paper on “Injection Molding Processing of Bio-Based & Bio-Filled Resins.”

It identified some basic design principles, such as the need to reduce stress concentrators in PLA molded parts, which tend to be more brittle than conventional thermoplastics.

Use of rounded corners is one example, notes Jake Nelson, a Steinwall project engineer involved in designing with bioplastics. The paper also suggests some ways to design snap-fits with natural-fiber filled PLA.

Another aspect of the ANTEC paper deals with processing of fiber-reinforced PLA. Key concerns are managing the heat and shear sensitivity of both PLA and natural fibers, notes Luke Buerkley, Steinwall processing engineer. Low fill speeds were used in the study, though this required compensating with higher hot-tip gate temperatures to prevent freeze-off.

One other point noted in the paper is that noncorrosive mold materials such as stainless steel are typically recommended for molding PLA, out of concern that thermal degradation during processing could result in release of lactic acid. “Our processing procedures mitigate this effect,” notes Buerkley, so the company is confident that standard mold steels are adequate for molding PLA.

Founded in 1965, Steinwall operates a 245,000 ft2 plant that employs 170 and runs over 55 injection machines from 30 to 1750 tons. It is currently producing two commercial parts in PLA with bio-fillers.

One is a storage container for medicinal cannabis of PLA with hemp fibers. It has been in production for a year for Sana Packaging of Denver, and Steinwall hopes to mold 1 million units this year.

The second application is an enclosure for a rodent repellent in PLA with flax reinforcement, molded for EarthKind LLC, Bismarck, N.D. Steinwall has been making it for two or three years, and volume is up to around 15,000 units annually.

Dworshak notes that in both cases, the customers chose the biomaterial for a “natural” and “sustainable” solution. For that they were willing to pay around 30% more per pound than if they had chosen a conventional plastic.

“PLA compounds are also more dense than conventional alternatives, so there’s an additional cost premium on a volumetric basis,” adds Nelson.

One of the factors limiting the growth of reinforced PLA compounds for engineered applications is the limited sources and availability of such materials. “That supply chain is still developing,” notes Dworshak. Much more readily available are compounds of natural fibers in conventional resins such as PP. He says such products are cost-competitive with talc-filled compounds (such as $1.15/lb for hemp-filled PP).

Besides the “natural” aspect, these materials have the attraction, in some cases, of utilizing what would otherwise be agricultural waste products (such as rice hulls, agave, and wood fibers from sawdust.)

The drawback, he concedes, is that natural fibers “complicate recycling because they are thermally sensitive to reprocessing.”

Nonetheless, natural fibers have attracted considerable interest, particularly in the automotive industry. That’s why, in January, Steinwall hosted a molding demo attended by major automotive and agricultural-equipment OEMs. For this demo, Steinwall molded interior parts in PP compounds filled with agave, rice hulls, coconut, and wood fibers. All compounds were supplied byRheTech in Whitmore Lake, Mich.

“We gave them samples to show the different appearance properties of the different natural fillers,” says Buerkley. “We molded the parts successfully on the first attempt, thanks to our technical team and Steinwall’s long history of developing processes around bio-based plastics.”

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This article was published on http://www.ptonline.com by Matthew Naitove

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