Thermoformed Plastics Design Requirements: Specifications and Metrics

Designing thermoformed plastic parts requires strict adherence to geometric, material, and thermal specifications to ensure manufacturability and performance.

  1. Geometric Design for Thermoforming (DFT)
Design Element Specification/Metric Constraint & Rationale
Radii (Internal Corners) Minimum radius: 1.5 mm. Larger radii (e.g., 0.125″ minimum for structural parts) are critical to minimize stress concentrations and material thinning.
Tool/Material Radius Ratio Radius minimum should be equal to or greater than the initial material thickness. If the radius is smaller than the starting thickness, forming is difficult or impossible.
Draft Angles (General) Generally recommended: >2°. Ensures easy demolding without surface defects.
Draft Angles (Molds) Negative molds: 1.5° – 2° standard. Positive molds: 4° – 6° recommended. Facilitates clean tool release and improves reproducibility.
Rib Draft Angle Minimum draft: . Essential for part removal and uniform material distribution.
Rib Base Radii Minimum: 25% of the material’s thickness. Example: For a 0.250″ gauge, apply a minimum base radius of 0.0625″.
Forming Ratio (Negative) Depth-to-Width Ratio should not exceed 1.5:1. Higher ratios result in significant thinning, increasing the risk of rupture at the bottom edges.
Wall Thickness The original sheet thickness is the maximum wall dimension. The deepest drawn areas will inherently be the thinnest.
Tolerance (Typical) General formed features: +/- 0.060″. Tighter tolerances (e.g., +/- 0.010″) require additional, costly operations.
Shrinkage (PC) Polycarbonate mold shrinkage: 0.005 – 0.007″ per inch (0.13-0.18 mm). Shrinkage in the extrusion direction (MD) for 1.80-2.30 mm sheet is typically 6-7%, while transverse direction (TD) shrinkage is 0.5%.

 

  1. Processing and Temperature Specifications (Polycarbonate Example)
Process Step Temperature/Time Specification Critical Requirement
Pre-Drying (PC Sheet) 250°F (121°C) in an air circulating oven. Must occur before thermoforming to prevent moisture vaporization (air bubbles/voids).
Drying Time (PC Example) 0.236″ (6mm) gauge sheet requires 24 hours at 250°F (121°C). Sheets stacked without air spacing will not dry.
PC Softening Point Glass transition temperature is 298°F (148°C). Softening begins rapidly above 311°F(155°C).
Sheet Forming Temp (PC) Target range: 340°F to 415°F (171°C−213°C)

Optimum: 350°F−375°F (177°C−191°C)

Polycarbonate has a relatively narrow forming temperature range.
Mold Temperature (PC) Recommended mold temperature range: 210°F−250 °F (99°C−121°C) A heated mold ensures better shaping, more gradual cooling, and reduced induced stress.

 

 

III. Material and Compliance Requirements

Requirement Specification/Metric Relevant Materials & Example
UV Resistance Required for exterior parts (e.g., consoles, housings). ASA offers excellent UV stability. ABS is highly UV sensitive and requires a UV cap layer (e.g., ASA) for outdoor service.
Heat Tolerance (Low) Insufficient HDT leads to permanent deformation. PVC/Acrylic blends have a low heat distortion point, around 71°C (160°F). HDPE melting point is typically 120°C to 135°C.
Flammability Rating Minimum for enclosed interiors/electrical housings: UL 94 V-0. V-0 requires burning to stop within 10 seconds on a vertical specimen, with no flaming drips. V-2 explicitly permits flaming drips.
Fire Testing Component subjected to flame for 2 1/2 minutes. Temperature within one inch of the component must reach at least 648°C during the test.
Environmental Stress Crack Resistance (ESCR) Must be specified for structural polyolefins (HDPE) near chemicals. HDPE standard grades are susceptible to brittle failure when stressed and exposed to surface-active agents (fuels, cleaners).
Chemical Encasing (Tanks) Cellular plastic must not change volume by more than 5% or dissolve after 24 hours at 29°C in reference liquids. Non-polyurethane encasing plastic must have compressive strength of at least 60 pounds per square inch at 10% deflection.
Thermal Expansion PC thermal expansion rate is approximately four times higher than metal. For fastening to metal, slotted holes and controlled torque are mandatory to prevent thermal strain failure.

 

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