Technical Essentials of Precision Injection Molding for Polyoxymethylene (POM)
Polyoxymethylene (POM) has become indispensable in precision injection molding due to its excellent mechanical
properties and dimensional stability, widely used in electronics, automotive, and medical sectors. Mastering its core
technical essentials ensures product accuracy and reliability.
Material Pretreatment: Preventing Molding Issues
Though POM has low hygroscopicity (equilibrium water absorption ~0.22%), surface moisture causes degradation at
high temperatures, leading to bubbles or silver streaks. It requires hot-air drying at 80-90°C for 2-3 hours to reduce
moisture below 0.05%. Dried material must be conveyed through sealed systems to avoid reabsorption. Barrel temperature
control is critical—maintain rear sections 10-15°C cooler than front sections to prevent premature melting and uneven
plasticization.
Mold Design: Precision Foundation
Mold design must account for POM’s 1.8%-2.5% shrinkage, using mold flow analysis to set accurate compensation coefficients.
Segmented shrinkage rates (2.2% for thick sections, 1.9% for thin areas) ensure precision. Conformal cooling channels maintain
cavity temperature differences ≤5°C; thick sections need additional cooling wells with 3-5 second extended cooling times. Draft
angles should be ≥0.5° with surface roughness Ra ≤0.4μm. Deep-cavity parts require combined ejection mechanisms (ejector
pins + stripper plates) for uniform force distribution and deformation prevention.
Injection Parameter Optimization
Barrel temperatures should stay between 190-220°C, with nozzles 5-10°C cooler. Melt temperatures exceeding 230°C cause
degradation, requiring infrared monitoring. Injection pressures range 100-150 MPa, using multi-stage speed control (60% initial
speed, 30% near cavity fill) to reduce shear stress. Holding pressure at 60%-80% of injection pressure, with holding time adjusted
to wall thickness (1-2 seconds/mm). Cooling occupies 50%-60% of the cycle, ensuring ejection temperature below 110°C. Mold
temperatures maintained at 80-100°C via controllers enhance crystallinity and stability.
Post-Processing and Quality Control
High-precision parts need annealing at 120°C for 2 hours with slow cooling, eliminating over 80% internal stress. Coordinate
measuring machines inspect critical dimensions with ±0.002mm accuracy. For mass production, hourly 5-sample inspections
and X-R control charts ensure Cpk ≥1.33. Tensile tests verify strength ≥60MPa, while friction testers maintain coefficients at 0.15-0.25.
Common defects require targeted solutions: warping needs cooling optimization and annealing; sink marks demand increased
holding pressure and cooling time; silver streaks require better drying and lower melt temperatures; flash necessitates higher
clamping force or mold repairs.
By integrating precise material handling, mold design, parameter control, and quality checks, POM precision injection molding
meets the stringent requirements of 5G communications, new energy vehicles, and other high-end manufacturing fields, ensuring
reliable performance of precision components.