Title of Invention

A METHOD FOR PRODUCING A BRISTLE FROM A THERMOPLASTIC POLYMER BY INJECTION MOLDING

Abstract The invention relates to a method for producing a bristle from a thermoplastic polymer by injection molding a molten polymer mass into a bristle-molding channel, said channel having a predetermined length and a predetermined cross- sectional shape along said length, the method comprising the steps of injecting the molten polymer mass into said channel under pressure, said pressure being selected in dependence on said cross sectional shape of said channel, a ratio of a largest width of a cross section of said channel to said length of said channel being selected as less than or equal to 1:10, wherein said injection pressure is 2000 to 5000 bar (2 x105 kPa to 5x105 kPa), and sufficient to provide a specific pressure in a bristle forming channel of more than 300 bar (0.3 x 105 kPa); and venting said channel along said length during step a), wherein a shear flow is established with a core speed of approximately 1000 mm/s in a center of molten polymer mass flow and with a large shearing effect due to wall friction of the molten polymer mass under distinct longitudinal orientation of polymer molecules, at least in a portion of the molten polymer mass proximate a wall of said channel, said longitudinal orientation of the polymer molecules being maintained throughout said length of said channel.
Full Text Method and Device for Producing Bristles
The invention concerns a method for producing a bristle from a
thermoplastic polymer through injection molding, wherein the molten
polymer mass is injected under pressure into a bristle-molding channel of
predetermined length having a predetermined cross-sectional shape along
this length and the channel is vented during injection molding. The
invention also concerns a device for carrying out this method.
Animal hair and natural fibers which were previously used as bristle
material for producing brushes, paint brushes or the like have been
substantially replaced by artificial bristles, wherein the production of the
bristle material is based largely on long-standing technology related to the
production of synthetic textile fibers, i.e. extrusion or spinning processes.
However, a bristle is subjected to completely different conditions than an
endless fiber in a fiber composite. It is free and fixed at only one end and
can be regarded in terms of stability as a bar which bends and which is
fixed at one end. Pressure or compression forces and sometimes also
tensile forces occur during use. Compared to endless fibers, the
production requirements are different with regard to bending strength,
fatigue strength under reversed bending stresses, buckling resistance and
bend recovery.
Monofilaments for bristles are therefore extruded having relatively large
diameters up to a few millimeters. Shaping by the extrusion and spinning
nozzle produces a certain longitudinal orientation of the molecules in the
molten polymer mass which is however not sufficient to provide the
monofilament with the desired properties. The monofilament is therefore
drawn, i.e. stretched under appropriate drawing forces, which usually
requires pre-drawing, post-drawing, and subsequently thermal
stabilization, which can be repeated, if required. The endless
monofilament is subsequently wound up and the wound-up product is
again stabilized, if required.
If, for production of brushes, the endless monofilaments are not processed
directly from the spool - which is still the exception today - a large
number of monofilaments are combined into strands and bound and cut to
suitable lengths of between 60 and 120cm. The strand material is again
cut to a length, which is slightly longer than the final bristles thereby
producing waste of approximately 30% of the initial material. For high-
quality plastic bristles, e.g. of polyamides (nylon), which are required for
quality brushes, e.g. toothbrushes, hygiene brushes etc., the price for the
raw material is the most expensive factor in the brush price. The price of
extruded bristles is consequently considerably increased by the large
amount of waste.
For brushes, the production of bristles is followed by mounting the bristles
to the bristle support, which can be effected either mechanically or
thermally. Since the free length of the bristles largely varies in this
intermediate state, shearing-off and in most cases post-processing of the
bristles and mainly of the bristle ends follows to remove the sharp cutting
edges. If the effective brushing surface formed by the free ends must
meet special requirements, e.g. for toothbrushes, the brushing surface
must either be given a contour already during mounting or the flat
brushing surface must be subsequently shaped, which produces additional
waste of approximately 10%.
Considering the fact that approximately 90% of the worldwide need of
bristles is limited to bristles having a length of production through spinning including all subsequent work processes until
the bristle is finished is highly uneconomical, due to the raw material
waste alone. Further limitations result from the fact that monofilaments
can usually only be produced with cylindrical shape and with profiled
cross-section such that the structure of the bristles is limited and
extensive later processing may be required.
Injection molding production of brush bodies, brush handles, paint brush
handles etc. from plastic material was established quite early in the brush
and paint brush industry to utilize the numerous structural possibilities of
injection molding technology. Various attempts were made to produce the
brush body with integral bristles through injection molding. In practice,
these methods are used only for bristles of the lowest quality and stability
requirements, in particular those which are used only once or a few times.
Injected bristles have a much worse bending strength, fatigue strength
under reversed bending stresses and buckling strength, insufficient bend
recovery and low wear resistance. Injected brushes have highly conical
bristles with relatively large cross-sections in the root region of the bristle
due to the method, and are therefore more appropriately described as
pins or bolts rather than bristles. Some known injection molding methods
in brush technology are described below.
Rotating bristles for grinding and polishing surfaces are composed of disc-
shaped brush segments, which are produced individually through injection
molding (US 5,903,951). Each brush segment comprises a central support
disc from which the bristles outwardly extend radially or at an angle
inclined against the direction of rotation, relative to the radial direction.
The brush segments consist of a thermoplastic or thermoelastic polymer
(TP or TPE), which is filled with abrasive particles. The bristles preferably
have a length of between 1cm and 5cm and a diameter of between
0.25mm and 10mm, preferably between 1mm and 2mm. In one concrete
embodiment, the conical bristles have a length of 75mm and a diameter
of 2mm at the root and 1.5mm at the tip. The two-part injection mold
consists of two plates having the cavities for the support disc and the
bristles on mutually facing sides, which simultaneously form the mold-
separating plane. The molten polymer mass with the admixed abrasive
particles is injected from the center of the support disc at an injection
pressure of 690 to 6900 kPa (0,59 to 69 bar). The preferred pressure
range is between 2070 to 4830 kPa. The required venting of the mold
cavity occurs in the mold-separating plane, i.e. parallel to the bristles.
This unavoidably produces two mold-separating seams on the bristle
jacket, which extend from the root to beyond the tip. The abrasive
particles cause additional narrowing of the small cross-sections in the
bristle cavities and the molten polymer mass solidifies too quickly at these
locations prior to complete filling of the bristle cavity. For this reason,
injection molding is preferred in two steps, wherein a highly filled molten
polymer mass is initially injected into the bristle cavities and a more or
less unfilled molten polymer mass is then subsequently injected. One of
average skill in the art knows that during injection molding, practically no
molecular orientation takes place in the polymer (US 2001/0007161 A1,
see column 1, paragraph 0006). This produces a completely insufficient
bending behavior for bristles, which is additionally deteriorated by the
admixed abrasive particles. The stated maximum injection pressure of
6900 kPa (69 bar) is strongly reduced through the flow resistance in the
narrow mold cavity for forming the carrier disc and in the subsequent
bristle channels such that the person skilled in the art may have
reasonable doubts about the practicability of this method.
US 3,618,154 describes the production of a toothbrush in one single
injection molding process wherein the bristles on the brush head are
injected in a type of bundle arrangement. Towards this end, the two-part
injection molding tool whose mold-separating plane is in the plane of the
bristle head, has substantially cylindrical bores which extend from the
moid surface forming the bristle side of the brush head. Substantially
cylindrical mold cores engage in the bores from the opposite side wherein
one of their end faces forms part of the mold surface for the bristle
support side of the head and - starting therefrom - comprise groove-like
depressions which extend along jacket lines. These groove-like
depressions taper uniformly and conically from the front-side mold surface
towards the other end and terminate in a semi-spherical dome on the
jacket of the mold core on which the depressions are uniformly
distributed. Each depression forms, together with the bore wall in the one
part of the injection mold, a bristle-molding channel, which consequently
conically tapers from the mold cavity for the brush head towards the other
end. The channels are vented across their entire length in the separating
surface between mold core and bore, i.e. substantially parallel to the
bristles. US 3,618,154 requires high precision of the cooperating surfaces.
Each bristle inevitably has two mold-separating seams, which extend
along jacket lines on the bristle. It is also not possible to produce bristles
with circular cross-section since the groove-like depression in the mold
core has a substantially larger radius of curvature than the bore. This
produces a cross-sectional shape with discontinuities at which the mold-
separating seams, which cannot be subsequently removed, immediately
form. The bending behavior of the bristle differs in different directions
transverse to its axis. Furthermore, the bundles are not filled (their center
is free) so that the bristles cannot support each other as is the case in
conventional bundles. The serious problem of removing the individual
bristles from the mold is intended to be solved through corresponding
conicity of the bristle-forming grooves. This can obviously not work, since
the mold cores are simultaneously used as ejector pins which push
towards the bristle tips during release from the mold via the dome-shaped
ends of the groove-like depressions. The conicity is intended to make the
bristle ends relatively flexible during use of the toothbrush. This document
does not describe any measures which extend beyond conventional
injection molding technology and which could improve the bending
behavior of the injection-molded bristles. In this case as well, the polymer
molecules, as is usual in injection molding, have the energetically
favorable balled shape, which is, however, unfavorable with regard to
stability (US 2001/0007161 A1).
Moreover, in conventional toothbrush production (US 5,158,342) the
bristle stock is subsequently injected into a prepared depression of the
brush head of a pre-injected brush body, consisting of handle and the
brush head. This produces bristles of completely insufficient bending
behavior due to the conventional injection molding technology with
injection pressures of 30 to 60 bar (3000 to 6000 kPa).
GB 2 151 971 also describes two-step production of bristle stock and a
bristle support. In particular, this document clearly illustrates the problem
of releasing the bristles from the bristle-molding channels. Despite the
strong conicity of the bristles, which is favorable for release from the
mold, the mold removal process is slow and highly controlled, which
impairs the efficiency of the injection molding system. Injection molding
measures to increase the bristle stability are not described.
Much better results are obtained according to an older, not pre-published
patent application of the inventor (PCT/EP01/07439) with which a bristle
support is provided with bores which have a nozzle-like cross-sectional
shape. The molten polymer mass for the bristles is injected through the
nozzle-like bores into adjoining molding, channels of an injection mold.
This method produces a semi-finished product from bristle support and
bristles or also - with corresponding shape of the bristle support - a
finished brush, wherein the bristles have bending behavior characteristics,
which are similar in quality to those of extruded, bristles. The shape of the
bristles is not subjected to the constraints of endless production of
extruded monofilaments.
US 4,712,936 discloses production of small application brushes, e.g. for
decorative cosmetics, which are inserted into a container and mounted to
the sealing cap of this container, as one-part injection molding part which
consists of cap, a stem centrically adjoining the inner side thereof, and
brush bristles disposed at the end thereof. The mold cavities for the cap,
the centrical stem and the joining bristle-molding channels are formed in
the two parts of an injection molding tool with axial orientation, wherein
the cap opening is in the mold separating plane thereof. The stem and
bristles are produced through mold cores, which are pushed coaxially into
each other. The injection side is on the cap. The molten polymer mass
must consequently traverse long flow paths with several cross-sectional
changes and overcome large mass requirements before reaching the thin
bristle channels. The entire venting of the stem and bristle region takes
place at the ends of the bristle channels via a cylindrical closure with knurl
structure which is to form a type of filter with high flow resistance. This
prior art shows that the bristles that can be produced through injection
molding are not suitable, in particular, for use as paintbrushes. After
removal from the mold, they are therefore re-heated outside of the
injection mold and are subsequently drawn. The cross-section is thereby
reduced which inevitably increases the separation between the bristles.
However, for application brushes of this type, the bristles should be
disposed at minimum mutual separations to produce capillary action
between the bristles for storing and retaining the application medium.
Attempts have also been made (DE 21 55 888 C3) to produce a brush
with formed-on bristles through injection molding with an injection
molding tool having a first tool part for the bristle support and a second
tool part largely covering the open mold cavity in which a short channel is
formed which widens at its opposite end and is closed at that location.
During injection, the molten polymer mass penetrates from the mold
cavity of the support into the short channel and flows into the widening to
produce a short bolt with a head. During opening of the mold, the head is
carried along and the bolt-like bristle blank is drawn. This can produce a
certain molecular orientation, which increases the stability - similar to
production of endless monofilaments.
Attempts to replace production of bristles from extruded endless
monofilaments and their subsequent mounting to separately produced
brush bodies, with an injection molding of the entire brush with bristles
have therefore obviously failed (US 2001/0007161 Al).
This is also true for the known suggestion of only producing the bristle
through injection molding (US 3,256,545). This closest prior art is based
on the realization that extruded bristles have ends of increased flexibility
imparted to them by post-processing of the bristle ends as do bristles
obtained through injection molding of one-piece brushes in consequence
of the conicity required for injection molding, which have however
disadvantageous effects with regard to wear resistance and durability.
This patent method suggests improving the wear resistance, which
decreases towards the ends, by enlarging the cross-section of the injected
bristle, going from the end on the mounting side (the injection side bristle
root) towards the free end. The cross-sectional shape may increase
continuously or discontinuously. In any event, a larger amount of plastic
material is present in the region of the working ends of the bristles than
on the mounting side end. The insufficient properties of known conical
bristles are compensated for through accumulation of a larger plastic mass
in the region of the bristle ends. However, one has thereby overlooked the
fact that, as the plastic mass or cross-section increases, the proportion of
the energetically favorable balled structure increases, i.e. the bristle
excessively looses bending elasticity due to the enlarged cross-section.
This injection molding method proposes injection pressures of between
800 and 1200 bar (approximately 0.8105 to 1.2-105 kPa), which are
required to introduce the molten polymer mass through the channels,
which are initially narrower on the injection side, into the extended
channels such that they fill the mold. Despite the relatively high pressure,
the recommended bristle diameters of unoriented molecular structures are
between 1.6 and 2.2mm in the region of the thinner cross-section and
between 11 and 12mm in the region of the thicker cross-section (column
5, lines 43 to 48 and column , lines 32 to 42). Support structures of the
same molten polymer mass are formed on the injection side of the
bristles, for mounting the injection-molded bristles to a bristle support,
and interconnect several bristles, if required.
The technical literature also teaches (Ehrenstein: Eingenverstarkung von
Thermoplasten im Schmelze-DeformationsprozeB in the German magazine
"Die Angewandte Makromolekulare Chemie" 175 (1990), pages 187 to
203) that for polyamides, only 3% and 6% and for polyethylene only 33%
and 5.5% of the theoretical mechanical values for the modulus of
elasticity [N/mm2] and tensile strength [N/mm2] respectively are obtained
through extrusion and injection molding methods, wherein for injection-
molded components, the tension-free state (molecular balled structure) is
preferred.
It is the underlying object of the invention to produce bristles through
injecting molding whose bending behavior and bend recovery is superior
to that of extruded bristles, and which permits maximum attainment of
the theoretical values of the modulus of elasticity and tensile strength to
produce bristles of high quality through a large length range with
relatively small cross-sections for simplified production of bristle
geometries and bristle arrangements adjusted to the requirements of the
final product such as brushes or paint brushes. The invention also
concerns a device, which is suitable for carrying out the method.
Departing from the known injection molding method, wherein the molten
polymer mass is injected under pressure into a bristle-molding channel of
predetermined length and predetermined cross-sectional shape along this
length, and the channel is vented during injection molding, this object is
achieved in that the magnitude of the injection pressure is adjusted in
dependence on the cross-sectional shape of the bristle-molding channel
such that a shear flow of the molten polymer mass is generated with high
core speed in the center of the molten polymer mass flow and large
shearing effect due to wall friction under distinct longitudinal orientation of
the polymer molecules, at least in the region of the molten polymer mass
close to the wall, which is maintained along the channel, wherein the
channel is simultaneously vented along its length to support maintenance
of the shear flow.
The invention is based on the realization that the bending behavior of a
monofilament can be primarily increased through generation and
maintenance of a molecular orientation which has previously not been
realized in injection molding of bristles, brushes and paint brushes. The
molecular structure in a molten polymer mass flow can only be
substantially influenced using sufficiently narrow cross-sections and melt
flow forced to a speed profile having strong shearing effects to deform and
stretch the energetically most favorable tension-free balled structure. For
this reason, in accordance with the invention, the injection pressure is set
to a sufficiently high level that a steep flow profile forms in the bristle-
molding channels which is characterized by a high core speed in the
center of the flow and large shearing effect in its edge region due to the
wall friction of the molten polymer mass on the channel wall, wherein the
shearing forces due to wall friction are larger the higher the speed
difference between neighboring flow layers. A flow profile of this type with
high core speed moreover ensures perfect filling of the mold of the bristle-
molding channel even for the narrowest of cross-sections (small bristle
diameter) and large channel length (bristle length).
The speed profile can be set in dependence on the predetermined cross-
sectional shape along the length of the bristle-molding channel through a
correspondingly high, optionally variable injection pressure. The polymer
molecules are thereby oriented longitudinally close to the channel wall
and, to a reduced degree, within the entire melt flow, wherein the
magnitude of the core speed moreover prevents premature solidification
of the molten mass, even for small cross-sections and large lengths.
High pressure alone is not sufficient for rapid filling of a narrow molding
channel. In accordance with the invention, the channel is vented along its
length such that the shear flow with high flow speed is maintained up to
the end of the channel and the desired longitudinal orientation of the
molecules reaches the bristle tip.
Practical tests have shown that the injection pressure should be at least
500 bar (0.5105 kPa) and is a function of the cross-sectional dependence
of the bristle-molding channel. For the quality bristles under discussion
having an average bristle diameter of e.g. 0.3 (measured at half the
length) and a corresponding cross-section of the bristle-molding channel
and with a length of 10.5mm, the desired speed profile can be produced
with an injection pressure of at least 500 (0.5105 kPa). Approximately 2/3
of the above-mentioned injection pressure can usually be converted into
specific pressure in the bristle-molding channel such that the molten
polymer mass in the channel should have a pressure > 300 bar (0.3105
kPa).
During solidification below the crystal melt temperature, thermoplastic
materials form crystallites, which influence the modulus of elasticity (E
module) and the tensile strength (tearing strength) in dependence on
their shape and configuration. The formation of needle crystals has a
positive influence on stiffness through increase of the E modulus and
strength due to an increase of the tensile strength and initially requires
linked elongated crystal seed formation on parallel molecular sections.
This seed formation can be amplified compared to isothermal
crystallization through the introduction of forces as given i.a. in flow
processes. The inventive high injection pressure and the high flow velocity
of the molten polymer mass in the bristle-molding channel obtained
thereby therefore not only promote longitudinal molecular orientation but
also crystal formation, wherein the high pressure simultaneously increases
the packed density of the crystals through increased loading. The partial
crystallization of the molecularly oriented molten mass increases the
relaxation time, i.e. the molecular orientation lasts for a longer period.
The above-described effects are further supported in a supplement to the
invention in which the bristle-molding channel is cooled.
The narrower the cross-section and the larger the length of the bristle-
molding channel, the more reasonable it is to keep the channel walls
warm to maintain the viscosity of the molten polymer mass and obtain
complete filling of the mold. When setting the inventive method
parameters, the filling of the mold is also guaranteed when the bristle-
molding channel is cooled. Cooling of the channel and associated
introduction of forces additionally promote formation of crystals and
increase relaxation time. The stabilizing outer layer of the bristle, which is
produced on the channel wall, permits increase of the post-pressure,
which is common in injection molding. The higher the post-pressure, the
stronger the crystal seed formation in the still molten bristle core. The
pressure simultaneously increases the melting temperature and enhances
cooling of the molten mass for a given mass temperature, thereby further
producing a positive effect on the crystal growth speed and impeding
relaxation of the molecules.
The high injection pressure and high flow velocity require particular or
additional measures for rapid and effective venting to ensure complete
mold filling and to prevent cavities in the molding channel or air inclusions
in the molten mass. In the conventional injection molding methods, the
bristle-molding channel is vented when the cavity is completely closed at
the end of the channel or, for a longitudinally split injection mold defining
the channel, in two planes parallel to the bristles. In the first case, for
forming a perfect, preferably rounded bristle end, the venting must be
drastically reduced to prevent molten polymer mass from getting into the
venting regions. For venting parallel to the bristles, the mold-separating
plane lies in the flow direction with the consequence that the molten
polymer mass penetrates into even the most narrow of venting gaps and
produces mold-separating seams along the bristle jacket.
The invention therefore proposes venting of the bristle-molding channel
transverse to the flow direction of the molten polymer mass, wherein the
venting is preferably effected in several planes transverse to the flow
direction of the molten polymer mass. The number of venting planes is
higher, the longer the bristle-molding channel such that, for
predetermined channel length, the venting is controlled in dependence on
the speed of the molten mass front. Since venting is possible in such a
plane about the entire periphery of the bristle channel, there is a
corresponding gap length transverse to the flow direction which is larger
than that of a bristle-parallel mold-separating plane and which can be
implemented over a plurality of planes.
The venting planes can be provided at equal separations along the length
of the bristle-molding channel in dependence on the volume to be vented,
optionally with progressive or degressive separation in the flow direction
of the molten polymer mass. This permits simultaneous maintenance of a
sufficiently high counter pressure in the channel to obtain uniform filling of
the mold.
The bristle-molding channel can be vented merely through displacement
of air through the flow pressure of the molten polymer mass. However,
venting can also be supported by external underpressure.
The inventive method permits injection of the molten polymer mass into a
bristle-molding channel from the injection side with a cross-section, which
is substantially uniform to produce a substantially cylindrical bristle, which
could not be produced with previous injection molding technology for
bristles and brushes.
The cross-section may substantially continuously taper from the injection
side to produce a bristle with preferably only weak conicity, which is
desired for many applications to increase the bending elasticity from the
bristle root to the bristle end. Such conicity promotes maintenance or
even reinforces a steep velocity profile with high core speed and shearing
effect in the edge region which increases along the length such that,
despite increased flow resistance, the molecular orientation and crystal
formation is enhanced towards the bristle end.
Injection molding produces precisely sized bristles with a tolerance of ±3%
in cross-section and in length while extruded bristles with the same
constructive parameters have tolerances of ±10%. The initially circular
cross-section of extruded bristles is ovalized through processing which is
unnecessary for the bristles produced according to the present invention.
Injection molding technology usually regards mold removal slopes of a few
degrees (>1.00°) as necessary to be able to properly remove the
injection-molded part. Mold removal is usually supported by ejectors.
When the bristles are injection-molded in accordance with the above-
mentioned prior art, the mold slope must be considerably larger to
prevent tearing off of the bristle during removal from the mold (US 3 256
545). This is one reason why prior art uses injection-molding tools, which
have a bristle-parallel mold-separating plane, thereby accepting the
above-described disadvantages. The inventive method permits reduction
of the mold slope to a value of 0° with sufficient mold filling. Slender
bristles of great length can be produced with relatively small conicity in
the region of 0.2 to 0.5° when the positive properties of a conical bristle
are desired having a bending angle which increases towards the bristle
end. Mold removal is simplified by crystal formation promoted by the
longitudinal orientation and the associated increase in the tensile strength
(tear resistance) of the bristle, in particular in the region close to the wall,
which is important for removal from the mold. Further measures for
facilitating removal from the mold are described in connection with the
device.
In a further embodiment of the inventive method, the molten polymer
mass is injected into an inlet region which narrows like a nozzle towards
the bristle-molding channel for generating an extension flow to produce a
bristle with a widened root region which optionally tapers continuously
towards the actual bristle.
Such narrowing generates an extension flow, which produces considerable
molecular orientation and, due to flow properties, corresponding boosting
of the flow profile after the narrowing. The narrowing is therefore
preferably disposed close to the injection side. It is also possible to
provide narrowings along the length of the bristle-molding channel to
obtain stepped bristles wherein, in this case as well, the narrowings have
positive effects on the molecular structure and crystal formation.
After an optional upstream inlet region, the cross-section of the bristle-
molding channel is preferably selected with a maximum width of such that the injection-molded bristle has a corresponding diameter with
an optionally broader root region. Bristles having this cross-section and
broader root region cannot be produced through extrusion or spinning.
The term "largest width" in this connection means that the bristle may
also have a cross-section, which differs from a circular shape, e.g. oval,
wherein the largest width of the length corresponds to the larger axis of
the oval.
In applications of the inventive method, the ratio between the largest
width and the length of the channel may be selected to be 1:1000, preferably up to have a length of between 15mm and 750mm with a maximum diameter of
3mm in or close to the root region. The smaller the largest width, the
shorter the length. For stringent requirements, e.g. for toothbrushes,
application brushes etc. diameters above the root region of recommended which permit bristle lengths of more than 60mm in the
inventive method.
The inventive method can be modified in a likewise advantageous fashion
when the molten polymer mass is injected simultaneously into several
neighboring bristle-molding channels thereby forming a corresponding
number of bristles such that a set of bristles can be produced in one
injection process. Minimizing of the separation of the bristle-molding
channels produces bristle arrangements in the form of pucks through
slight compacting of the removed bristles.
The number and arrangement of the bristle-molding channels can be
selected such that the entire bristle stock of a brush or of a paint brush is
produced in one injection process, wherein the separations between the
bristles and their geometrical relationships can be varied in accordance
with the desired arrangement in the bristle stock.
A further embodiment provides that the molten polymer mass is injected
into the neighboring bristle-molding channels thereby simultaneously
forming a connection between at least two bristles, wherein the
connection may serve for further handling of the connected bristles and
also as an aid for connection to a brush body, paint brush handle or the
like. Alternatively, after injection of the bristles from a polymer, a molten
polymer mass of another polymer can be subsequently injected to produce
a connection between the bristles. The connection may be in the form of
bars, grids connecting several bristles, or the like. The use of different
polymers with a joining factor of >20% guarantees sufficiently secure
connection.
The connection may further be designed such that it forms a bristle
support which may simultaneously constitute the brush body or part
thereof or which can be completed into a brush body or paint brush
handle by injecting at least one further molten polymer mass which may
comprise a different thermoplastic or thermoelastic polymer.
In a further variant of the method, several bristles can be injected with
different lengths such that, in combination with the bristle support
connecting them, a complete bristle stock or partial stock can be produced
for a brush or a paint brush, wherein the bristle ends are at different
heights along a flat or non-planar envelope surface so that the finished
brush has optimized bristle end contours.
The bristle group can also be injected with different cross-sections to
permit different effects in predetermined regions of a finished brush.
Likewise, the bristle group can be injected with a cross-sectional shape,
which differs along its length. The bristle group can also be injected in a
mutually non-parallel fashion to produce a bristle stock with differing
bristle orientations.
In accordance with another embodiment of the method, bristles having
the same geometry but different bending elasticity (hardness) can be
generated through injection molding of different molten polymer masses
in the same molding channels. For extruded bristles for brushes having
different degrees of hardness (textures) e.g. for toothbrushes having
hardness gradations of soft, medium, hard, the desired degree of
hardness could be influenced only via the diameter of the bristle, i.e.
toothbrushes of the same structure had to prepare and process up to
three different bristle diameters. The inventive method realizes these
degrees of hardness merely through selection of the polymer and
optionally by adjustment of the injection pressure but with identical bristle
diameters.
Bristles can also be injected from a polymer or a polymer mixture, which
have reduced secondary binding forces in the solidified state. These
bristles can be cleaved after production through mechanical forces thereby
forming flags, if necessary only after further processing into brushes or
paintbrushes.
The bristles can be injected from a polymer comprising additives, which
become active during use. The additives may have mechanical, e.g.
abrasive effect or, e.g. for toothbrush bristles, be additives with
protective, therapeutical or remineralizing action. Numerous additives of
this type are known.
The invention also concerns a device for injection-molding bristles from
thermoplastic polymers, comprising a means for producing the injection
pressure and an injection mold which has at least one supply channel for
the molten polymer mass and at least one cavity in the form of a molding
channel with a mold contour which corresponds to the length and cross-
sectional shape of the bristle to be produced, wherein the molding channel
has associated venting means for releasing the air displaced during
injection molding. Devices of this kind are known from the above-
described prior art.
A device of this type is characterized, in accordance with the invention, by
means for generating an injection pressure of preferably at least 500 bar
(0.5-105kPa) and the venting means have venting cross-sections which are
distributed along the length of the molding channel and which are
designed to form, in cooperation with the injection pressure, a shear flow
with high core speed in the center of the molten polymer mass and large
shearing effect on the wall of the molding channel.
Such a device can produce bristles through injection molding as described
in connection with the method. Compared to known injection molding
devices for producing bristles or one-piece brushes with bristles, the
device according to the invention is designed such that the desired flow
dynamics is obtained in the channel forming the bristle.
The means for generating the injection pressure is preferably designed
such that injection pressures of between 500 and 4000 bar (0.5105 to
4-105 kPa) can be set depending on the length and cross-sectional shape
of the molding channel. The pressure is higher, the smaller the cross-
section of the bristle to be produced and the greater its length.
The means for generating the injection pressure and venting cross-
sections on the molding channel are designed with respect to construction
and control such that the molten polymer mass in the molding channel
has a specific pressure of at least 300 bar (0.3-105 kPa) to 1300 bar
(1.3105 kPa). This design is adjusted to the mass flow and flow
resistances to be overcome upstream of the molding channel.
If the injection pressure on the generating means is sufficiently high, the
injection pressure can advantageously be controlled depending on the
length and the cross-sectional shape of the molding channel to permit
injection of injection molds of different geometrical shapes with one
injection-molding unit.
This purpose is supported in that the venting means have venting cross-
sections, which can be controlled depending on the specific pressure.
In the inventive device, the injection mold is advantageously associated
with coolant, which may be external cooling after each injection molding
cycle or after removal from the mold. The molding channel in the injection
mold may have associated cooling means for keeping the molding channel
at a reduced temperature.
In a particularly preferred embodiment of the invention, the injection mold
consists of several molding plates disposed in layers transverse to the
longitudinal extension of the molding channel, each of which defines a
longitudinal section of the molding channel.
In contrast to prior art with more or less block-shaped injection molds, the
invention provides a structure of stacked molding plates. This structure
permits forming of minimum bore cross-sections with high precision in
each molding plate of low thickness. This and any other production
technology would fail for larger bore depths. This is also a reason why
longitudinally separated injection molds were necessary for the production
of narrow cross-sections. Their disadvantages are described in connection
with prior art. The inventive decomposition of the injection mold into
several plates permits realization of molding channels of large length with
high and reproducible precision over the entire length. The molding plates
which comprise the end of the molding channels and form the bristle end
can have, due to the small thickness of the molding plates, cavities with
only small depth to form a bristle end having clear contours, without any
mold separating seam, and without additional venting means. Oxidation of
the polymer, which can be observed in narrow mold cross-sections
through the so-called diesel effect, does not occur due to the small depth
of the cavity.
The layered structure of the injection mold moreover permits formation of
the venting means on the molding plates, i.e. with a frequency
corresponding to their number. The venting means are preferably formed
between the mutually facing support surfaces of the molding plates e.g.
through narrow gaps or channels. The high flow velocity of the molten
polymer mass perpendicular to such narrow gaps or channels prevents the
molten mass from penetrating into the venting openings, despite the high
pressure. The venting openings may therefore be larger than in a two-
shell mold whose mold-separating plane is in the flow direction of the
molten mass. The venting cross-sections may be formed with a maximum
width of only a few urn up to 300pm.
The venting means are preferably formed completely or partially through
surface roughnesses on the mutually facing surfaces of the molding
plates.
In a further advantageous embodiment, the venting means have venting
cross-sections which increase outwardly from the surface of the molding
channel such that the air can freely escape after passage of the narrowest
point of the venting cross-sections.
The displacement of air caused by the specific pressure in the molding
channel can be supported when the venting means is connected to an
external underpressure source.
The device may be designed such that the molding channel has a cross-
section which is substantially constant along its length or which
substantially uniformly tapers towards its end to produce cylindrical or
slightly conical bristles.
Practical injection tests under the stated method conditions have shown
that the molding channel can taper at an angle produce sufficient mold slope for removing a slightly conical bristle, having
excellent bending behavior, from the mold.
The molding channel can have a cross-section, which discontinuously
tapers towards the end to produce specially designed bristle ends as
required by the application for the finished brush.
The largest width of the cross-section of the molding channel is preferably
and paintbrushes.
At least one molding plate can be disposed on the injection side having a
widening which tapers towards the molding channel and can be connected
upstream of the molding plates defining the molding channel having the
above-mentioned largest width at their sides facing the supply channel to
reinforce the cross-section on the bristle root and on the bristle base and
also to obtain, due to this widening, an extensional flow at the inlet region
of the molding channel to support formation of the desired flow dynamics.
The widening can narrow like a trumpet towards the molding channel to
produce a smoothly connecting shoulder at the bristle and to the support
connecting the bristles, brush body or the like. This is particularly
important for hygiene brushes of any type.
The ratio between the largest width of the cross-section of the molding
channel and its length is preferably between 1:5 and 1:250 but may also
be 1:1000 wherein the ratio is closer to the higher value the narrower the
cross-section of the molding channel and closer to the lower value the
larger the narrowest cross-section.
A further embodiment of the invention provides that the number and
thickness of the molding plates is matched to the length of the molding
channel, wherein the number of the molding plates is inversely
proportional to the ratio between the largest inner diameter of the cross-
section and the length of the molding channel. The number of molding
plates, which belong to an injection mold, can be variable to be able to
produce bristles of varying length with the same mold.
The molding plates preferably have a thickness, which is approximately
three to fifteen times the central diameter of the molding channel. For a
bristle of an average diameter of 0.3mm and a length of 10.5mm, the
molding plates have e.g. a thickness of 1.5mm to 2.00mm. A longitudinal
section of the molding channel of 1.5mm to 2.0mm can be drilled with
high precision into the molding plate.
The molding plates are movable perpendicular to their plate plane,
individually or in groups. This permits, in particular, removal of the bristle
from the mold in a non-conventional fashion, wherein e.g. the molding
plates, starting with the molding plate having the mold contour at the end
of the molding channel and ending with the molding plate facing the
supply channel, can be subsequently removed either individually or in
groups.
The molding plates are reliably kept together under the method-specific
high closing pressure of the injection-molding machine and are not
subjected to any deforming forces, despite their low thickness. Moreover,
the venting openings are kept closed by the closing pressure and, unlike
channels with longitudinal venting, require no additional means to keep
them closed.
Practical tests have shown that the inventive narrow cross-sections and
channel lengths require considerable extraction forces to release the
bristles if e.g. only two molding plates are present. The bristle usually
breaks. Increasing the number of plates and their successive separation
from each other permits damage-free removal of the bristle from the
mold, in particular when the molding plate facing the supply channel is
removed last. During removal from the mold, the edges of the holes of
each molding plate function as drawing nozzles to flatten any "polymer
skin" formed in the mold-separating plane without disadvantageously
effecting the bristle jacket. In any event, the bristle ends are perfectly
formed.
Individual molding plates may be displaceable parallel to the neighboring
molding plates to exert transverse loading on the bristle after injection
molding, thereby optimizing the molecular structure.
In a further preferred embodiment, the injection mold has molding
channels of different length and/or different cross-sectional shape to
obtain e.g. a bristle stock of the desired geometry and configuration in
one injection molding cycle.
In accordance with a further embodiment, the injection mold has molding
channels comprising a central axis which extends at an inclined angle
relative to the direction of motion of the molding plates, wherein each
molding plate comprises a longitudinal section of the molding channel with
a length which permits removal from the mold through successive removal
of the individual molding plates, despite the angle variation.
The subdivision of the injection mold into a plurality of molding plates
extending transverse to the molding channel permits subdivision of the
molding channel into longitudinal sections which nevertheless permit
removal of the individual longitudinal sections from the mold without
excessive strain on the bristle or deformation thereof even when the
bristle axis is inclined relative to the direction of motion of the molding
plates (removing direction). In this fashion, bristle groups can be
produced in one single injection mold, wherein the bristles extend parallel
to each other but at an angle relative to a bristle support connecting them
or which have different angle orientations relative to each other.
In accordance with a further embodiment, the injection mold has molding
channels with a central axis which is curved relative to the direction of
motion of the molding plates, wherein each molding plate defines a
longitudinal section of the molding channel which is dimensioned such that
removal form the mold is possible through successive lifting of individual
molding plates in dependence on the curvature.
Wavy bristles can thereby be produced which can also be easily removed
from the mold. It is also possible to simultaneously produce straight, wavy
and curved bristles in one single injection mold.
In a further embodiment, the injection mold has at least one molding
plate which can be displaced in its plane relative to the neighboring
molding plates after injection-molding of the bristles to form, together
with these, a clamping means for all the bristles which acts on the
corresponding portion of the length of the molding channel.
The invention thereby permits use of parts of the injection mold to grasp
the injected bristles and fix them in the injection mold along a portion of
their length e.g. to separate the molding plates close to the ends, in the
removal direction, from the remaining molding plates and to carry along
the bristle blanks such that the bristles are exposed along a middle partial
length, i.e. between these molding plates and the remaining molding
plates. Subsequent displacement of the clamping molding plates and
return of the molding plates close to the end in the direction towards the
injection end of the bristles, causes these ends to project past the molding
plate at the injection side. Through transfer of the injection mold,
optionally under further clamping by the holder, the injection mold can be
connected to another injection molding tool, which has a mold cavity
forming a bristle support or brush body. In a further injection molding
process, the projecting ends are surrounded by a further molten polymer
mass, which fills this mold cavity.
The clamping means may also serve as a transport holder to transfer the
clamped bristles, after removal from the other molding plates, into
another work station for connection to a brush body. This is also possible
when the bristles are already joined via a connection such as e.g. bridges,
grids or bristle supports. The clamping molding plate is then located close
to the transition between bristles and bristle support and the holder is
removed in the removal direction along with the connection and
subsequently transferred, wherein the molding plates which serve as
holders are replaced by an equivalent set of molding plates to again obtain
a complete injection mold. The holder can be a portable holder moving in
a circulating path and be reused after complete removal of the bristles
from the holder to complement: the injection mold. If the connection is not
directly required for the subsequent fabrication steps, e.g. insertion,
gluing, welding, injecting etc. it can also be removed and only the bristles
may be connected to the bristle support or brush body using any
conventional joining technique.
A further embodiment of the invention provides that the injection mold
consists of at least two groups of molding plates comprising clamping
means of which the first group comprises part of the molding channel
including the end and the further groups comprise the remaining part of
the molding channel, wherein the first group can be removed from the
second group and the subsequent groups can be removed from each
other, in temporal sequence. The injection process is divided into a
number of injection molding cycles corresponding to the number of groups
such that, in the closed initial position of the injection mold, the molten
polymer mass is injected in a first injection cycle into the complete
molding channel, whereupon the first group can be removed from the
further groups thereby carrying along the blank via the clamping means,
with the withdrawal path being shorter than the length of the blank.
Subsequently, in a second injection molding cycle, more molten polymer
mass is injected into the released longitudinal section of the molding
channel of the further groups and the steps injection/removal are
repeated until the second to last group is removed from the last group to
produce bristles of a length greater than the length of the molding
channel. The bristle is produced in sections, which permits production of
bristles of greater lengths.
In this embodiment of the device, a different molten polymer mass can be
injected in each injection cycle to produce a bristle which has several
components along the bristle length, wherein the polymers used in each
step can be matched to the requirements of the bristle and connection to
the bristle support thereby producing a bristle with several regions. The
removal motions of the individual groups can be matched, in short time
intervals, to the injection molding cycle, wherein the blank is sufficiently
cooled that it is removed from the remaining molding plates during the
withdrawal motion. The individual regions are preferably bonded together
but may also be connected in a positive or non-positive manner through
corresponding profiling of the end of the last injected partial length.
The molding plate comprising the bristle end and the mold contour at the
end of the molding channel can preferably be replaced with a molding
plate having a different mold contour for producing bristles with ends of
different shapes. This molding plate should only have smooth contours to
permit faultless removal from the mold of the bristle end, which is
important for the respective use.
In this fashion, the end contour of the bristles can be varied for otherwise
constant geometry of the bristles, e.g. have pointed or variably rounded
ends or even to produce bristles with forked-ends (two tips or the like).
This molding plate may have longitudinal molding channel sections of
different depths to form a contoured envelope surface for the bristle ends
of a bristle stock.
A mold cavity, which connects two or more molding channels, is
preferably disposed between the supply channel and the molding channels
of the injection mold for forming a connection among the bristles which
can optionally also connect all bristles. It can serve either as an auxiliary
means for further handling of the entire bristle stock or as an auxiliary
means for completing the bristle stock with a brush body.
The mold cavity can also be designed to produce a brush or paintbrush
body or part thereof.
In particular, the mold cavity can thereby be formed from different
polymers for producing a brush or paintbrush body or part thereof in a
multiple component design.
The invention is described below by means of diagrams and embodiments.
Fig. 1 shows a diagram of the speed profile in molding channels of
different diameters;
Figs. 2 to 4 each show a schematic view of an embodiment of the
molding channel with the respective speed profiles;
Fig. 5 shows a schematic view of a bristle injection-molded in a molding
channel of Fig. 2 with the speed profiles essential for the
longitudinal orientation;
Fig. 6 shows a schematic view of a constriction in a molding channel
with an extension flow;
Fig. 7 shows a schematic view of a conical bristle on a scale of 2:1 with
dimensions;
Fig. 8 shows a schematic view of a conical bristle on a scale of 1:5 with
dimensions;
Fig. 9 shows a comparative schematic representation of the speed
profiles in an extrusion nozzle and in a molding channel;
Figs. 10 through 13 each show a schematic longitudinal section through
an embodiment of an injection mold in different operating
phases;
Fig. 14 shows a schematic longitudinal section through a further
embodiment of the injection mold;
Fig. 15 shows an enlarged detail of the injection mold of Fig. 14 in the
region of an externally disposed molding channel;
Figs. 16 through 20 each show a schematic longitudinal section of a
modified embodiment of an injection mold in different operating
phases;
Figs. 21 through 23 each show a schematic longitudinal section of a
further embodiment of the injection mold in different operating
phases;
Fig. 24 shows a longitudinal section of the injection mold corresponding
to Figs. 21 to 23 with a supplementary mold;
Figs. 25 , 26 each show a longitudinal section of an injection mold in a
further modification and in two operating phases;
Figs. 21 , 28 each show a longitudinal section corresponding to Figs. 25,
26 with a contoured thrust plate;
Figs. 29 , 30 each show a longitudinal section corresponding to Figs. 25,
26 with another blank mold;
Fig. 31 shows a schematic longitudinal section through an injection mold
for producing bristles of different longitudinal extension;
Fig. 32 shows a schematic section through an injection mold for
producing bristles with branched bristle ends;
Fig. 33 shows a highly enlarged schematic view of a bristle;
Fig. 34 shows a highly enlarged schematic view of the arrangement of
two bristles;
Fig. 35 shows a highly enlarged schematic view of a further embodiment
of the bristle;
Fig. 36 shows a top view onto the free end of the bristle of Fig. 35.
Fig. 1 schematically shows the flow profile (speed profile) in bristle-
molding channels of different diameters. The walls of the channels are
indicated with broken vertical lines and the associated diameters are given
in (mm) below the diagram. The smallest bristle-molding channel has a
diameter of 0.3mm, the largest has a diameter of 6mm. A constant flow
speed in the center of the channel (core speed) leads to the illustrated
flow profiles in dependence on the channel diameter (bristle diameter)
which have, in rough approximation, a parabolic dependence. If the
diameter of the molding channel remains constant along its length, the
flow profile does not change its shape or does so only slightly.
If the molding channels have a weak conical shape, as schematically
shown in Figs. 2 through 4, the core speed can even be increased for
constant pressure and a strong shearing effect can be produced by the
wall friction in the region close to the wall. If such a molding channel is
loaded with molten polymer mass during injection molding, the molecules
experience a strong longitudinal orientation in the wall region due to the
shearing effect while the molecules in the molten mass which is not
subjected to loads have their energetically most favorable, balled
structure. For molten polymer mass injected in the molding channel under
corresponding high pressure, this leads to a strengthening of the produced
bristle in the region close to the wall which extends to the bristle end for
sufficiently high core speeds, with the molecular orientation decreasing
towards the center. The molecular orientation due to shear flow with
strong shearing effect in the region close to the wall is also accompanied
by tension-induced crystal formation, wherein the strong shearing effect in
the edge region promotes formation of long needle crystals. Moreover, use
of high injection pressure has a favorable effect on the seed formation and
the crystal density. With a specific injection pressure in the molding
channel > 300 bar (0.3105 kPa), preferably > 1300 bar (1.3105 kPa), the
modulus of elasticity and therefore the bending elasticity can be
considerably improved when the forming channel is sufficiently vented,
thereby increasing the tear resistance (tensile strength). This specific
pressure requires an injection pressure of > 500 bar (0.5105 kPa) from
the pressure-generating means.
A bristle in accordance with Fig. 5, produced in a molding channel of Fig. 2
has a relatively stiff root region a and a bending elasticity along its free
length 1, which increases towards the bristle end as well as high tensile
strength. While the root region a serves mainly for connection to or
embedding in a bristle support or brush body, the bristle has, along its
free length L a stem section which consists of a stem base b and the
actual stem c. Reduction of the cross-section in the regions b and c which
is essential for the bending deflection, is compensated for through
increase in the bending elasticity due to the above-described effects. The
stem region b, c is joined by the actual effective region d, i.e. the region
important for the brushing effect which forms, together with the tip region
t, the region which determines the flexibility of the bristle. The tip region
and its shaping determine the direct surface effect of the bristle, the
penetration depth into the surface irregularities etc.. In contrast to Fig. 2,
the bristle can have a trumpet-shaped root region of greater or lesser
distinction when a widening is connected upstream of the actual molding
channel as shown in Figs. 3 and 4.
The stabilizing effects can be further improved and, in particular, also
obtained for short bristle lengths when a discontinuous constriction is
provided on the inlet side of the molten polymer mass before transfer into
the actual bristle-molding channel (see Fig. 6). An extension flow is
formed at the constriction, which produces a high core speed along a
short path with large shearing effect in the region close to the wall.
The inventive operating parameters for injection pressure and the
achievable high core speeds with large shearing effect through wall friction
produce thin bristles of adjustable length using injection molding, which
has not been possible up to now, not even with extrusion of endless
monofilaments, wherein even weak conicity of bristles of such endless
monofilaments can be realized only through considerable technical effort
(interval withdrawal). Figs. 7 and 8 show two embodiments. Fig. 7 shows
(scale 2:1) a bristle of a diameter of 0.77mm in the root region and
0.2mm at the bristle end, which has an average diameter of 0.49mm at
half-length. With an extremely weak conicity angle of 0.27°, which
corresponds to the mold slope of the bristle-molding channel, bristles of a
length of 60mm or more can be injection-molded as are required e.g. for
high-quality paint brushes or the like. They have an average diameter at
half bristle length of approximately 0.5mm. Fig. 8 shows (scale 5:1) a
bristle of a diameter of 0.35mm in the root region and of 0.25mm at the
bristle end with a bristle length of 10.5mm and the same conical angle
(mold slope). The average diameter is 0.3mm. Bristles of this type are
suited e.g. for toothbrushes. Due to the slender geometry of such bristles,
they can be densely arranged without producing excessive separation in
the region of the bristle ends - in contrast to conventional injection-
molded bristles.
Fig. 9 shows the superiority in terms of technical properties and
applications, of the bristle produced according to the invention compared
to a bristle produced by extrusion.
During extrusion spinning of a monofilament for producing a bristle of an
average diameter of 0.3mm, the spinning nozzle has an outlet diameter of
0.9mm (outer vertical lines in Fig. 9). The molten polymer mass has a
maximum flow speed (core speed) inside the nozzle of typically
approximately 300mm/s, which is determined by the extrusion pressure
and the withdrawal speed of the monofilament. The monofilament, which
leaves the nozzle, is drawn along a short path, by means of the
withdrawal forces, to a diameter of between 0.9 and 0.3mm and cooled
directly thereafter to fix the molecular structure. During subsequent
drawing, the monofilament is given its final diameter of 0.3mm with a
diameter tolerance of approximately ±10%. The speed profile is
designated as e (extrusion) in Fig. 9.
In the inventive injection molding, the bristle-molding channel has an
average diameter of 0.3mm (the two inner vertical boundary lines in Fig.
9). An injection pressure in the region of 2000 bar (2105 kPa) produces a
core speed of approximately 1000mm/s in the channel. The speed profile
is designated as i (injection). The shearing effect in the flow, in particular
in the region close to the wall is relevant for the intrinsic strength of the
thermoplastic polymer, which is determined by the shearing rate (shearing
moment) y. The shearing rate y across the radius r of the flow channel
depends on the derivative of the speed profile with respect to the radius r

which is inversely proportional to the square of the effective diameter of
the flow channel. The shearing rate is linearly proportional to the
maximum flow speed (core speed). In the above-described example
shearing rates for the injected bristle are produced which exceed the
stated extrusion flow by at least a factor of 10.
The broken lines in Fig. 9 illustrate the shearing rates without scaling for
extrusion (e1) and for injection molding (i1). They have respective maxima
at the walls of the nozzle of the bristle-molding channel.
Figs. 10 to 13 schematically show an embodiment of an injection mold in
different operational phases which is particularly suited for injection
molding of the bristles according to the inventive method. The scale is
highly enlarged to show the details more clearly.
The injection mold 1 has several fong parallel molding channels 2 which
are joined to an injection molding means via a supply channel 3. The
injection molding means is designed to produce injection pressures in the
region of 500 bar (0.5105 kPa), preferably > 2000 bar (2105 kPa). The
exact magnitude of the injection pressure is set in dependence on the
cross-sectional shape of the molding channel 2 along its length and in
dependence on the length itself such that a specific pressure > 300 bar
(0.3105 kPa) occurs in the molding channel.
The injection mold consists of a plurality of layered molding plates 4 of
substantially identical thicknesses, of a molding plate 5 on the injection
side, and a molding plate 6 forming the bristle ends. Each molding plate 4,
5 and 6 generates one longitudinal section of the molding channel 2,
which is preferably produced by bore holes.
The molding plate 5 has openings 7 on the injection side which narrow
towards the molding channel 2 to produce e.g. the extension flow of Fig. 6
and form the root region a (Fig. 5) of the bristle. The subsequent
longitudinal sections of the molding channel in the molding plates 4 have
a cylindrical or slightly conical cross-sectional shape along their length
while the molding plate 6 forming the bristle ends has blind holes 8 which
are dome-shaped in the embodiment shown.
During injection molding, the molten polymer mass enters into the
narrowing openings 7 of the molding plate 5 via the supply channel 3 and,
due to the high core speed, fills the entire molding channel up to the plate
6 forming the ends. The molten polymer mass has a substantially
unordered, balled molecular structure in the supply channel 3 which is
transformed into a longitudinal molecular structure in the opening 7 on
the injection side and subsequent molding channel 2 due to the strong
shear flow.
The molding plates 4, 5 and 6 can be moved perpendicular to the plane of
the plate to release the injection-molded bristles when they have achieved
sufficient shape stability. The injection molding tool 1 is preferably cooled
such that the wall of the molding channels 2 remains relatively cold,
thereby supporting the formation of crystals in the molten polymer mass.
To release the bristles from the mold, the molding plate 6 is initially
removed (Fig. 11). Only very small adhesive forces must be overcome
thereby ensuring that the bristle ends, which are particularly important for
later use of a brush or a paintbrush, maintain their shapes. The molding
plates 4 are subsequently removed individually or in groups (Fig. 12) until
the ends 10 of the bristles 9 are released along most of their length.
During these releasing steps, the bristles are retained by means of the
molding plate 5 on the injection side and this molding plate 5 is also
subsequently removed to expose all bristles 9 with their slightly thickened
root region 11 (Fig. 13). The molten polymer mass in the supply channel
on the injection side also effects a connection 12 among all bristles 9 and
the overall blank can be removed and finished into a brush, a paint brush
or the like, wherein the connection is either integrated into the structure
or only serves as auxiliary means for handling the bristles and is
separated off before connecting the bristles to a brush body or the like.
Optimum venting of the molding channels must be provided during
injection molding to facilitate the desired high core speed. Fig. 14 shows
an embodiment thereof. Venting occurs via narrow gaps 13 between the
molding plates 4, 5 and 6 so that the air is removed along the entire
length of the molding channels 2 as the front advances. Instead of narrow
gaps 13, it is also possible to roughen the mutually facing surfaces of the
molding plates 4, 5 and 6, to obtain overall venting cross-sections of
sufficient size. The venting cross-sections have widenings 14 towards the
outside to permit rapid escape of the exhausting air.
The molding channels 2 may taper along their entire length with a mold
slope mold but rather by the desired bristle shape and its bending behavior. The
cross-sectional shape of the molding channels 2 must not be continuously
conical (see the enlarged scale of Fig. 15 illustrating the venting
geometry). The upper molding plate 4 in the drawing indicates a
cylindrical longitudinal section 15 and the lower molding plate 4 a
cylindrical longitudinal section 16 for the molding channel 2. The cross-
section of the two molding plates 4 tapers from the longitudinal section 15
to the longitudinal section 16 of the molding channel 2 by a few µm to
produce a weak step at this point. At this step region, venting takes place
via the gap 13 between the two molding plates, which map into a
widening 14. During release from the mold, these unnoticeable steps are
not visible and produce slight conicity along the entire length of the
bristle. The longitudinal sections 15, 16 in the individual molding plates 4
can be produced through simple drilling. Alternatively, the longitudinal
sections of the individual molding plates can have identical diameters to
produce a cylindrical bristle. More distinct diameter changes produce
stepped bristles.
Conical bristles are technically advantageous for injection molding and for
removal from the moid. The smallest cross-section at the bristle end cools
more rapidly than the subsequent regions of the bristle towards the root
region and the step-by-step release from the bristle end to the bristle root
follows the temperature gradient in the bristle.
The molding plates 4 have a thickness of a few millimeters. It may
correspond approximately to three to fifteen times the diameter of the
molding channel 2 so that extremely precise drilling of the longitudinal
sections in the individual molding plates is possible. Since they are kept
adjacent to one another under the closing pressure of the injection-
molding machine, even these thin molding plates maintain their
dimensions and shape, despite the high injection pressure. The low
thickness also ensures good thermal dissipation, since the molding plates
are evenly insulated by the venting gaps. They are easy to cool for the
same reason, e.g. using external coolants, which can be particularly
effective when the mold is closed, and also during the time between
opening and renewed closing. Effective cooling already occurs via the
surrounding air due to exposure of the molding plates and in consequence
of their small thickness. Alternatively, the cooling means may be
integrated in or between the molding plates. Finally, the minimal loading
under injection pressure permits production of the molding plates from
materials having good thermal conductivity with less stringent mechanical
strength properties than steel or the like.
The influence of effective cooling on the molecular structure of the bristles
has already been discussed above.
Fig. 16 also schematically shows an injection mold 1 which consists of
layered molding plates 4, wherein the molding plate on the injection side
does not have widened cross-sections. In contrast to the above-described
embodiments, the molding plates 4 are divided into two groups 17, 18
(see Fig. 17) wherein each group comprises at least one molding plate
which can be transversely displaced (indicated in Figs. 17 to 20 with
double arrows 19, 20.)
The transversely displaceable molding plates cooperate with the
neighboring molding plates to clamp the blanks 21, which, in this
embodiment, only form one portion (longitudinal section) of the final
bristle. The blank 21 is injected from a thermoplastic polymer with
injection parameters matched to this longitudinal section of the finished
bristle. After the injection cycle, at least one displaceable plate of the
group 18 of molding plates 4 (Fig. 17) is brought into a damping position
and the blanks 21 are carried along when the group 18 is removed to be
thereby partially released from the molding plates 4 of the group 17 on
the injection side and free a predetermined longitudinal section 22 of the
molding channels in the molding plates 4 of the group 17. At the end of
the blank 21, profilings may be optionally formed as indicated in the
drawing. After withdrawal of the molding plates 4 of the group 18, the
displaceable molding plate in the group 17 is brought into the clamping
position and the exposed longitudinal sections 22 are subsequently filled
with a molten polymer mass, which consists of another polymer or a
polymer with other additives. The longitudinal sections 23 of the bristle
which are formed thereby connect to the blanks 21 through material
bonding and/or positive locking. Subsequently, the displaceable forming
plate in group 17 is returned to its initial position and the blanks 21 with
molded-on longitudinal sections 23 are again partially withdrawn from the
molding channels of the group 17 when the clamping means is closed to
expose longitudinal sections 24 in the molding channels. In a further
injection molding cycle, the longitudinal sections 24 are filled with a
further molten polymer mass with optionally further differentiated
properties to finally obtain bristles 27 having three regions (sections 21,
23 and 25) for different mechanical strength properties and/or different
usage properties along the bristle length. In particular, the region 21,
which encloses the bristle end, can serve as wear display to show the
degree of wear of the bristle. Final release of the bristles from the mold is
carried out as described above.
Figs. 21 to 24 also show an injection mold 1 (Fig. 21) which consists of
two groups 17, 18 of molding plates 4 each of which has at least one
transversely displaceable molding plate to form a clamping means. In
contrast to the above-described embodiment, the molding plate 5 on the
injection side has widenings, which taper towards the molding channel.
The molding plate 6 forming the bristle ends has blind holes 28, 29 and 30
of different depths with dome-shaped hole bottoms such that a plurality of
bristles of different lengths can be produced whose ends lie on a curved
envelope surface.
In the embodiment of Figs. 21 to 24, bristles are injected sequentially with
two different regions 31, 32 wherein the region 31 has an extended bristle
root 33. The multiple-section bristles 34 (Fig. 22) injected in this fashion
are subsequently removed from the mold at their ends by removing the
molding plate 6 forming the bristle ends and - optionally with delay -
removing the molding plates 4 of the group 18 (Fig. 22). Subsequently, at
least one transversely displaceable molding plate in the group 18 is
brought into a clamping position and the entire group 18, optionally
together with the terminal molding plate 6, is displaced in the opposite
direction so that the part of the region 31 of the bristles 34 including the
root region 33 project past the molding plate 5 at the injection side.
Subsequently, the injection mold 1 (Fig. 23) )s connected to a further
injection mold 35 with a mold cavity 36 into which a molten polymer mass
is injected with which the root regions 23 and the longitudinal sections of
the regions 31 which project into the cavity 36 are injected. The mold
cavity 36 may be formed so that it defines an intermediate support for the
bristles or a complete brush body in which the bristle ends are embedded
without gaps so that they cannot be pulled out.
In a modification of this embodiment, the molding channels 2 of the
injection mold 1 of Fig. 21 can also be completely filled with one single
molten polymer mass and, as shown in Figs. 22 and 23, their root regions
can be exposed together with the adjacent longitudinal sections for
injection with the support-forming molten polymer mass (Fig. 24).
In a further modification, the bristles which are injected according to Figs.
21 to 23 and released at their mounting-side ends can be completely
released from the mold through removing the molding plate 6 forming the
ends and the major part of the subsequent molding plates 4 while being
held by a few, at least three, molding plates, e.g. the injection-side
molding plate 5 and the two subsequent molding plates one of which can
be transversely displaced to form a damping means. These molding
plates, which serve as a transport holder, can be transported together
with the bristles into another injection molding station in which they are
brought into connection with the injection mold 35 while simultaneously
providing a new set of molding plates with injection-side molding plate 5
to complete the injection mold 1. This transport holder can move the
bristles into the second injection molding station and also continue
transport into other processing stations.
Figs. 25 and 26 show part of an injection mold 1 with molding plates 4
and 5 after production of the bristles and removal of at least the last
molding plate 6 (not shown). Replacing the latter, a flat thrust plate 39 is
moved in front of the released ends with which the bristles 38 are
displaced in the molding channels of the remaining molding plates until
their root region 37, and optionally an adjoining longitudinal section,
project past the injection-side molding plate 5 or into the mold cavity 36
of the further injection mold 35 and are injected with a molten polymer
mass to form a bristle support or a brush body.
Figs. 27 and 28 show an embodiment with which, after production of the
bristles 38 as described with reference to Figs. 25 and 26, instead of the
flat thrust plate 39, a thrust plate 40, which has cam-like projections 41
and 42 of different heights, is moved in front of the released bristle ends.
When the thrust plate 40 has been moved towards the molding plates 4,
the bristles are displaced along the thrust path to different depths within
the molding channels so that their root region 37 projects into the mold
cavity 36 of the injection mold 35 to different depths and the bristle ends
lie on a curved envelope surface after injection and removal of the thrust
plate 40 and molding plates 4 and 5.
Figs. 29 and 30 show an embodiment which differs from that of Figs. 25
and 26 only in that the bristles 38 are interconnected in the region of the
injection-side molding plate 5 via a connection 43 in the form of bars,
grids or the like and project with the connection 43 and the subsequent
longitudinal sections of the bristles 38 into the cavity 36 of the injection
mold 35 after displacement via the thrust plate 39.
A smaller group of molding plates 4, preferably including the injection-side
molding plate 5 and with at least one molding plate 4 which can be
transversely displaced to act as clamping means, may serve as transport
holder for transferring the bristles into further injection molding stations,
processing stations or the like.
The layered structure of the injection mold from a plurality of molding
plates and the thereby possible sectional removal from the mold and the
increase in the modulus of elasticity and tensile strength obtained by the
inventive method parameters of injection pressure and flow speed in the
molding channel permit production of bristles whose central axis is not in
the direction of release from the mold. Figs. 31 and 32 show examples
thereof. Fig. 31 shows a part of an injection mold with slanting molding
channels 44, 45 that are inclined towards each other in this embodiment.
In addition to or alternatively, the injection mold 1 may have wavy,
curved molding channels 46 or molding channels 47 with several bends so
that correspondingly formed bristles are produced which can be injected \n
a composite action via a connection 48. For release from the mold, the
molding plates 4 and 6 are removed, starting with molding plate 6, and
the bristles are released in sections without being deformed due to their
high bending elasticity and the small release length.
The bristles may be fabricated into a brush after separation of the
connection, individually or in groups or together with the connection 48
through injection around it or through other conventional thermal or
mechanical connection methods.
In the embodiment of Fig. 32, the injection mold 1 has layered molding
plates 4 and two end molding plates 49, 50 that form distinctively
branched bristle ends. The injection-molded bristles 51 each have finger-
like bristle ends 52 which can be easily removed from the mold due to the
thin molding plates and the increased stability of the bristles.
The molding plates 6 or 49, 50 which form the bristle ends can be made
from a sintered metal, in particular, for distinctly branched bristle ends
which also provides additional venting In this region to effectively prevent
trapping of air. The molding plates 4 can, of course, also be made from
such sintered metais to support venting of the molding channels. Micro-
roughnesses which exist e.g. in sintered metals or which can be produced
through surface treatment of the molding channel produce corresponding
roughnesses in the micro region on the surface of the finished bristle
which have a moisture repellant "Lotus" effect during use of the bristle.
Fig. 33 shows one individual bristle 53 which can be used in particular for
hygiene brushes, e.g. toothbrushes, cleaning brushes in the medical and
hospital fields or as cleaning or application brushes in the food industry.
Suitable setting of injection pressure and flow velocity (core speed) in the
bristle-molding channel permits optimum adaptation of the bending
behavior of the bristle along its length to the respective purpose of use,
the bristles having an average diameter of 0.3 to 3mm. They can widen
like a trumpet in the root region 54 to obtain a relatively bending-resistant
shoulder, which also forms a smooth transition to the surface of the brush
body 55. This entire gap-free region, the stem base and the actual stem of
the brush 53 and the bristle end 56, which is uniformly rounded in the
present case, can be produced with injection molding technology to have
smooth walls or walls with micro-roughnesses to prevent occurrence of
unwanted roughnesses and soiling. Due to these properties, the brushes
having bristles of this type can also be easily cleaned and/or disinfected
after use since no pockets, gaps or the like are present. Bristles having
this shape and the properties designed for the application can neither be
produced by extrusion nor by injection molding methods known to date.
Fig. 34 shows two neighboring bristles 57, which are combined at their
trumpet-like rounded root region 58 via a connection indicated with 59.
Using the inventive method, the bristles 57 with the connection 59 can be
disposed at a slight separation from each other, which can, moreover, be
optimally adjusted to the respective purpose of application. The bristles 57
can be positioned very closely to prevent moisture, dirt or bacteria
deposits or remnants following rinsing.
Fig. 35 shows a view of and Fig. 36 a top view onto a bristle 60 produced
according to the inventive method, which merges like a trumpet into the
bristle support surface 62 in the root region 61 and has a stem 63 with
relatively high bending strength and an effective region 64 with profiled
shape. In this embodiment, the effective region 64 has a cross-shaped
cross-section, which gradually merges 65 into the stem region. The cross-
shaped cross-section of the effective region 64 forms brushing edges,
which become effective under strong loading of the brush and bending of
the effective region. With reduced pressure, this effect occurs at the
rounded bristle end 66, which also has a cross-shaped profile. The bristle
end 66 can moreover penetrate into corners, gaps and furrows for
cleaning it. The same effects can be obtained with other polygonal cross-
sectional shapes.
WE CLAIM:
1. A method for producing a bristle from a thermoplastic polymer by
injection molding a molten polymer mass into a bristle-molding channel,
said channel having a predetermined length and a predetermined cross-
sectional shape along said length, the method comprising the steps of:
a) injecting the molten polymer mass into said channel under
pressure, said pressure being selected in dependence on said cross
sectional shape of said channel, a ratio of a largest width of a cross
section of said channel to said length of said channel being selected
as less than or equal to 1:10,
wherein said injection pressure is 2000 to 5000 bar (2 x105 kPa to
5x105 kPa), and sufficient to provide a specific pressure in a bristle
forming channel of more than 300 bar (0.3 x 105 kPa); and
b) venting said channel along said length during step a), wherein a
shear flow is established with a core speed of approximately 1000
mm/s in a center of molten polymer mass flow and with a large
shearing effect due to wall friction of the molten polymer mass
under distinct longitudinal orientation of polymer molecules, at
least in a portion of the molten polymer mass proximate a wall of
said channel, said longitudinal orientation of the polymer molecules
being maintained throughout said length of said channel.
2. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein said injection pressure is set to
support crystal seed formation between neighboring longitudinally oriented
molecular sections in dependence on said cross sectional shape and said
length of said bristle-molding channel.
3. Method as claimed in claim 1, wherein the bristle-molding channel is
cooled.
4. Method as claimed in claim 1, wherein the bristle-molding channel is
vented transverse to the flow direction of the molten polymer mass.
5. Method as claimed in claim 4, wherein the bristle-molding channel is
vented in several planes disposed transverse to the flow direction of the
molten polymer mass.
6. Method as claimed in claim 5, wherein the bristle-molding channel is
vented along its length via planes disposed at equal distances.
7. Method as claimed in claim 1, wherein the bristle-molding channel is
vented of air displaced by flow pressure of the molten polymer mass.
8. Method as claimed in claim l,wherein the channel is vented with the
support of an external underpressure.
9. Method as claimed in claim l,wherein the molten polymer mass is
injected into a bristle-molding channel with a cross-section which remains
substantially the same, beginning at the injection side.
10. Method as claimed in claim 1, wherein the molten polymer mass is
injected into a bristle-molding channel having a cross-section which tapers
substantially continuously from the injection side.
11. Method as claimed in claim l,wherein the molten polymer mass is
injected into an inlet region which narrows like a nozzle towards the
bristle-molding channel for producing an extension flow.
12. Method as claimed in claim 1, wherein the molten polymer mass is
injected into a bristle-molding channel whose cross-sectional shape has at
least one discontinuity in the form of a tapering in the flow direction of the
molten polymer mass.
13. Method as claimed in claim 1, wherein the cross-section of the bristle-
molding channel is selected to have a maximum width of 14. Method as claimed in claim 1, wherein the ratio of the largest width to
the length of the channel is selected to be 15. Method as claimed in claim 1, wherein the molten polymer mass is
simultaneously injected into several neighboring bristle-molding channels
thereby forming a corresponding number of bristles.
16. Method as claimed in claim 15, wherein the molten polymer mass is
injected into the neighboring bristle-molding channels thereby
simultaneously forming a connection between at least two bristles.
17. Method as claimed in claim 15, wherein after injection of the bristles, a
molten polymer mass of ano5her polymer is subsequently injected,
thereby forming a connection between at least two bristles.
18. Method as claimed in claim 15, wherein the molten polymer mass is
injected to form a bristle support which connects at least two or more
bristles.
19. Method as claimed in claims 18, wherein the molten polymer mass is
injected to form a bristle support which connects the bristles and forms a
brush body.
20. Method as claimed in claim 18, wherein at least one additional molten
polymer mass from another polymer is injected onto the bristle support.
21. Method as claimed in claim 15, wherein a number of bristles are injected
with different lengths.
22. Method as claimed in claim 15, wherein a number of bristles are injected
with different cross-sections.
23. Method as claimed in claim 15, wherein a number of bristles are injected
with a cross-sectional shape, which changes along their lengths.
24. Method as claimed in claim 15, wherein a plurality of bristles are injected
with parallel mutual orientation.
25. Method as claimed in claim 15, wherein at least one part of the bristles is
injected in a non-parallel fashion.
26. Method as claimed in claim 15, wherein bristles of a same geometry but
different bending elasticity (hardness) are produced through injection-
molding of different molten polymer masses in the same molding
channels.
27. Method as claimed in claim 1, wherein the bristles are injected from a
polymer or a polymer mixture, which has reduced secondary binding
forces in the solidified state.
28. Method as claimed in claim 1, wherein the bristles are injected from a
polymer composing additives, which become active during use.

The invention relates to a method for producing a bristle from a thermoplastic
polymer by injection molding a molten polymer mass into a bristle-molding
channel, said channel having a predetermined length and a predetermined cross-
sectional shape along said length, the method comprising the steps of injecting
the molten polymer mass into said channel under pressure, said pressure being
selected in dependence on said cross sectional shape of said channel, a ratio of a
largest width of a cross section of said channel to said length of said channel
being selected as less than or equal to 1:10, wherein said injection pressure is
2000 to 5000 bar (2 x105 kPa to 5x105 kPa), and sufficient to provide a specific
pressure in a bristle forming channel of more than 300 bar (0.3 x 105 kPa); and
venting said channel along said length during step a), wherein a shear flow is
established with a core speed of approximately 1000 mm/s in a center of molten
polymer mass flow and with a large shearing effect due to wall friction of the
molten polymer mass under distinct longitudinal orientation of polymer
molecules, at least in a portion of the molten polymer mass proximate a wall of
said channel, said longitudinal orientation of the polymer molecules being
maintained throughout said length of said channel.

Documents:

1111-KOLNP-2004-(03-12-2012)-FORM-27.pdf

1111-KOLNP-2004-CERTIFIED COPIES(OTHER COUNTRIES).pdf

1111-KOLNP-2004-CORRESPONDENCE 1.1.pdf

1111-KOLNP-2004-FORM 13.pdf

1111-KOLNP-2004-FORM 27 1.1.pdf

1111-KOLNP-2004-FORM 27 1.2.pdf

1111-KOLNP-2004-FORM 27.pdf

1111-KOLNP-2004-FORM-27-1.pdf

1111-KOLNP-2004-FORM-27.pdf

1111-kolnp-2004-granted-abstract.pdf

1111-kolnp-2004-granted-assignment.pdf

1111-kolnp-2004-granted-claims.pdf

1111-kolnp-2004-granted-correspondence.pdf

1111-kolnp-2004-granted-description (complete).pdf

1111-kolnp-2004-granted-drawings.pdf

1111-kolnp-2004-granted-examination report.pdf

1111-kolnp-2004-granted-form 1.pdf

1111-kolnp-2004-granted-form 18.pdf

1111-kolnp-2004-granted-form 2.pdf

1111-kolnp-2004-granted-form 26.pdf

1111-kolnp-2004-granted-form 3.pdf

1111-kolnp-2004-granted-form 5.pdf

1111-kolnp-2004-granted-form 6.pdf

1111-kolnp-2004-granted-gpa.pdf

1111-kolnp-2004-granted-reply to examination report.pdf

1111-kolnp-2004-granted-specification.pdf

1111-kolnp-2004-granted-translated copy of priority document.pdf

1111-KOLNP-2004-PA.pdf


Patent Number 233844
Indian Patent Application Number 1111/KOLNP/2004
PG Journal Number 16/2009
Publication Date 17-Apr-2009
Grant Date 16-Apr-2009
Date of Filing 04-Aug-2004
Name of Patentee GEKA BRUSH GMBH
Applicant Address WAIZENDORF 3, 91572 BECHHOFEN-WAIZENDORF
Inventors:
# Inventor's Name Inventor's Address
1 WEIHRAUCH GEORG AM ROSSERT 1, 69483 WALD MICHELBACH
PCT International Classification Number B29C 45/00, 45/26
PCT International Application Number PCT/EP2003/00131
PCT International Filing date 2003-01-09
PCT Conventions:
# PCT Application Number Date of Convention Priority Country
1 10201635.6 2002-01-17 Germany