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Glossary: Technical Terms
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R
- Reagent Resistance
- The ability of a plastic to withstand exposure to chemicals.
- Regrind
- Waste material such as sprues, runners, excess parison material and reject parts from injection molding, blow molding and extrusion, which has been reclaimed by shredding or granulating. Regrind is usually mixed with virgin compound at a predetermined percentage for remolding.
- Reinforced Plastic
- A plastic composition in which fibrous reinforcements are imbedded, with strength properties greatly superior to those of the base resin.
- Reinforcement
- A strong, inert fibrous material incorporated in a plastic mass to improve its physical properties.
- Resin
- (Synthetic) The term is use to designate any polymer that is a basic material for plastics.
- Runner
- In an injection mold, the feed channel, usually of circular cross section, that connects the sprue
with the cavity gate. The term is also used for the plastic piece formed in this channel.
- Runner System
- This term is sometimes used for the entire resin feeding system, including sprues, runners and
gates, in injection molding.
S
- Screw
- In extrusion, the shaft provided with helical ridges which conveys the material from the hopper
outlet through the barrel and forces it out through the die.
- Shear Strength
- The maximum load required to shear the specimen in such a manner that the moving portion has completely
cleared the stationary portion.
- Short Shot
- In injection molding, failure to fill the mold completely.
- Shot
- One complete cycle of a molding machine.
- Shot Capacity
- The maximum weight of material that can be delivered to an injection mold by one stroke of the
ram.
- Shrinkage Allowance
- The dimensional allowance which must be made in molds to compensate for shrinkage of the plastic
compound on cooling.
- SI
- Abbreviation for Le Systeme International d'Unites.
- Solvents
- Substances with the ability to dissolve other substances.
- SPE
- Abbreviation for the Society of Plastics Engineers.
- Specific Gravity
- The ratio of the density of a material as compared to the density of water at standard atmospheric
pressure (1 ATM) and room temperature (73F).
- Specific Volume
- The volume of a unit of weight of a material; the reciprocal of density.
- SPI
- Abbreviation for the Society of the Plastics Industry.
- Splay Marks
- Silver streaks like marks caused by moisture in material, material degradation, or wiping of the entrapped air on surface of mold.
- Sprue
- In an injection mold, the main feed channel that connects the mold filling orifice with the runners
leading to each cavity gate.
- Stabilizer
- An agent used in compounding some plastics to assist in maintaining the physical and chemical
properties of the compounded materials at suitable values throughout the processing and service
life of the material and/or the parts made therefrom.
- Stiffness
- The capacity of a material to resist elastic displacement under stress.
- Strain
- In tensile testing, the ratio of the elongation to the gage length of the test specimen, that
is, the change in length per unit of original length.
- Stress
- The force producing or tending to produce deformation in a body measured by the force applied
per unit area.
- Stress-Crack
- External or internal cracks in a plastic caused by tensile stresses less than that of its short-time
mechanical strength. Note: The development of such cracks is frequently accelerated by the environment
to which the plastic is exposed.
- Stress Relaxation
- The decay of stress at a constant strain.
- Stress-Strain Curve
- The curve plotting the applied stress on a test specimen versus the corresponding strain. Stress
can be applied through shear, compression, flexure, or tension.
- Structural Foam
- A term originally used for cellular thermoplastic articles with integral solid skins having high
strength-to-weight ratios, but now sometimes also used for high density cellular plastics which
are strong enough for structural applications.
T
- Tensile Strength
- The maximum tensile stress sustained by the specimen during a tension test
- Thermoelasticity
- Rubber-like elasticity exhibited by a rigid plastic resulting from an increase in temperature.
- Thermoforming
- The process of forming a thermoplastic sheet into a three-dimensional shape by clamping the sheet
in a frame, heating it to tender it soft and flowable. Then applying differential pressure to
make the sheet conform to the shape of a mold or die positioned below the frame.
- Thermoplastics
- Materials that become soft when heated and solid when cooled to room temperature. This softening
and setting may be repeated many times.
- Thermoplastic Elastomers
- The family of polymers that resemble elastomers in that they can be repeatedly stretched without
distortion of the unstressed part shape, but are true thermoplastics and thus do not require curing.
- Thermosets
- Materials that may not be reheated and softened again. Once the structural framework is set, these
plastics cannot be reformed, characterized by molecular cross-linking.
- Tool
- In injection molding, the term sometimes used to describe the mold.
- Transition Temperature
- The temperature at which a polymer changes from (or to) a viscous or rubbery condition (or from)
a hard and relatively brittle one.
U
- UL
- Abbreviation for Underwriters Laboratories, the non-profit safety testing organization.
- Ultimate Elongation
- In a tensile test the elongation at rupture.
- Ultimate Strength
- Term used to describe the maximum unit stress a material will withstand when subjected to an applied
load in a compression, tension, flexural, or shear test.
V
- Vacuum Forming
- A method of forming plastic sheets or films into three-dimensional shapes, in which the plastic
sheet is clamped in a frame suspended above a mold, heated until it becomes softened, drawn down
into contact with the mold by means of a vacuum, and cooled while in contact with the mold. Often
used interchangeably with thermoforming.
- Vicat Softening Point
- The temperature at which a flat-ended needle will penetrate a thermoplastic specimen under specific
conditions. (ASTM D-15225)
- Virgin Material
- Any plastic compound or resin that has not been subjected to use or processing other than that
required for its original manufacture.
- Viscoelasticity
- This property, possessed by all plastics to some degree, dictates that while plastics have solid-like
characteristics such as elasticity, strength and form-stability, they also have liquid-like characteristics
such as flow depending on time, temperature, rate and amount of loading.
- Viscosity
- A measure of the resistance to flow due to internal friction when one layer of fluid is caused
to move in relationship to another layer.
- Void
- In a solid plastic, an unfilled space.
W
- Weld Line
- The intersection of two confronting flow fronts creating areas of local weakness. Weld lines should
be positioned in the least sensitive areas.
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