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Category: Miscellaneous
Volume: 22
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Article No.: 3212

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PLASTIC WELDING: Failures of Plastic Welding Joints

It seems so easy to produce a good plastic weld. But, is it really so, or are there some hidden failures that might occur that nobody is able to recognize? Well, an expert can probably tell a good weld from a bad weld. When you know what kind of failures can occur, you will have a better understanding of plastic welding and what constitutes a good or a bad plastic joint. As I mentioned in previous articles, there are several things to consider before you start welding. As a reminder, I would like to briefly go over some important considerations or, if you missed my previous articles (which can be found at www.plasticsmag.com), use this as a start.

First, there are two primary groups of plastics, thermosets which are not weldable, and thermoplastics which generally are weldable. Don’t try to weld thermosets, they won’t melt. Basically, different thermoplastics cannot be welded together. Only the same materials can be welded successfully. Use caution with Polyamides (a common trade name is Nylon) or Polyurethanes. These materials come in different grades. Those grades don’t automatically fit together.

Regardless of the welding system you have, there are always three parameters you need to consider.

  1. Time - The material needs time to reach the weld temperature as well as time to cool down.
  2. Temperature - All thermoplastics have a certain weld temperature range. Stay in this area.
  3. Pressure - If the pressure on the plastic while welding is too high or too low, an actual mixing of the molecules is not possible.

So, what is a plastic welding joint failure? We will review charts of weld failures later.

The most important consideration is the location where the weld is to be made. There is a difference between an ‘indoor shop weld’ and an ‘outdoor weld’ in the wintertime. The range for the weld temperature will change when the environment temperature drops under room temperature. Protect the weld section when the conditions are wet, cold or otherwise not regular. Sometimes a tent or a tarp with a heater can be of help. If you get moisture inside your weld, voids will occur inside the bond of the plastic materials.

A good weld shows a perfect mixture between the molecules of the welded plastic materials. If one of the previously mentioned welding parameters is not in specs, the fusion is not completed. Contamination like dust and oil inside the weld will disturb the mixing process. Contagion will occur when the surface and welding rod is not prepared the correct way. Oxidation, dust, grease and damaged material should be removed prior to welding. The only exception is when a welding tool uses a heated tip to pre-heat and penetrate the parent material. The tip melts and pushes the surface to the side. With the right pressure, the molded welding rod gets injected under the surface, inside the weld area. An excellent molecule mix happens and a very strong weld occurs.

The right surface preparation is important to avoid failures in the weld right from the start. An ideal tool to do this is a scraping blade. Sanding paper or solvents are not recommended because the dust and the solvent’s holdovers will get mixed inside the weld. The angle of the weld area, if this kind of weld has to be done, is also critical. When you choose the wrong angle, the filler material will not be able to fill the whole weld area properly. Voids and cracking lines will occur and you will produce a weak joint.

The proper welding system for the application has to be chosen. It doesn’t matter what kind you take, always have the three parameters (temperature, pressure, time) in your mind.

When using a hot air welding tool, an oxidation automatically appears. This event is not ideal for producing a quality weld. Using a gas such as nitrogen will minimize, but not eliminate the oxidation problem. Another problem might be an air supply that is not clean, dry and oil free. If you have an airline, which shows these symptoms, particles will get blown directly inside the weld. They will work like a shield in between the molecules and prevent the important mixing process.

To create a strong weld, we know the material needs to be prepared first. Some plastics, like ABS or Polycarbonate, are hygroscopic (this means they absorb the moisture from the surrounding environment). These hygroscopic materials need to be dried before using them for welding purposes. Estimate the material you need to weld and dry only this amount. This will save time as the drying time depends on the material and the rod quantity.

Plastic, when heated, will expend. When it cools down, it will shrink. If the material is not properly fixed in place, it will bend to the welded side (see sketch below). A weld from both sides would be perfect to prevent a cracking area and keep the desired shape. If this is not possible, prepare the weld angle so that the welding rod can reach the other side. In order to keep the shape straight; a fixture should be used. This unit needs to be positioned until the weld is completely cooled down.

Altogether there are six failure groups of plastic welding to avoid. The following charts will help you recognize these failures.

Please note that the listings below are not a valuation or ranking of failures and are not limited to a certain kind of welding process or plastic material.

1. Cracks

Name

Description

Sketch

Crack

Limited material separation

with mostly two-dimensional expansion. The material can be separated over the entire thickness

No sketch

Craze

Tear, in opaque material only in an enlargement over 6 times, in transparent material often without optical remedies

No sketch

Longitudinal crack

Tear, toward the weld seam passing

Transverse crack

Tear, diagonally to the weld seam passing

Group of disconnected cracks

Tear groups not connected together

Branching cracks

Tears with ramifications

2. Cavities

Name

Description

Sketch

Gas pore or shrinkage cavity

Ball shaped cavity or cavity as a result of declining while cooling down

Uniformly distributed porosity

Numerous scattered pores

Clustered porosity

Located clustered pores

Linear porosity

Pores arranged in a line

Worm-hole

Long pores in various directions

Surface pore

To the surface open pore, individually or clustered appearing

Large pore

Cavity at the surface with thin skin, closed or open

3. Solid Inclusions

Name

Description

Solid inclusion

Solid enclosures inside the weld seam

Oxide inclusion

Thin, out of dismantled material existing enclosure inside the weld seam

Inclusion of decomposition products

Enclosures of decomposition particles in the weld seam

4. Joint Failures

Name

Description

Sketch

Lack of side wall fusion

Mixing error between weld seam and parent material

Lack of inter-run fusion

Mixing error between welding rod seams

Lack of fusion at the root of the weld

Root bead is not filled properly

Lack of penetration

Not sufficiently melted

5. Shape/Form Failures

Name

Description

Sketch

Shrinkage groove

Groove on the root bead

Under fill

Weld area is not filled completely

Under cut

Groove between weld seam and parent material

Bulge notch

Groove inside the weld seam

Excessive penetration

Root bead is too large

Incorrect weld profile

Weld bead is too wide (mostly happens with large extrusion welder)

Misalignment

Pieces are transferred

6. Miscellaneous Failures

Name

Description

Miscellaneous failures

Failures not incorporate in

Groups 1 to 5

Wrong dimension

Deviation of the prescribed measures of the weld seam (seam thickness, weld bead length)

Thermal damage

Heat impact

damaged material

Sure, different applications may have special requirements and it is not possible to cover them all here. But to give you an idea, I would like to show two simple examples of what considerations you should have in your mind before you start a welding job.

Example #1 - Changing of pipeline sections:

A pipeline is in use and you have to exchange a damaged part of it or change the pipeline direction? Consider the following to achieve a good welding job. Know the material, the medium and what amount of it flows through the pipe. Used pipes are contaminated and will have to be cleaned before you can weld them. The longer the section was in use, the more difficult it is to produce a proper weld.

After the cleaning process, the weld area has to be dried. Moisture inside the weld can cause some of the failures that were mentioned above. If you cannot stop the liquid from dripping, you can use a bladder. This balloon-like tool can be inserted and blown up inside the part. After the weld is done, you simply release the air and remove the bladder. Some mediums require a certain flow behavior. This may lead you to choose another type of welding equipment or work on the inside of the pipe to ensure a positive flow. Remember that it is difficult to remove a weld bead on the inside of a pipe.

Example #2 - Material with fillers:

The amount and quality of filler material inside your plastic parent material and welding rod can effect the quality of your weld. Sometimes, wired materials like wood chips or denim are used to provide volume and make plastic cheaper. That’s OK for some applications, for others it is not. Consider what happens inside the weld. The molecules of the welding rod and the parent material want to connect to each other, however, when a plastic molecule meets the filler molecule, they are not able to mix. A perfect bond is, in this case, not possible. For this application, special welding rod for polyethylene with filler materials is available. Please contact me for more information on this special rod.

To ensure that the quality of your welding job is within the specs that you and your customers require, there is testing equipment offered by a number of suppliers for different testing applications. With these machines you can perform certain tests (e.g. Tensile Strength or Flexural Strength) in-house. Another option is to send sample welds to a laboratory. To get a representative test result you must take a sample out of the same batch of material you are working with. You should use the same parameters, the same materials and have it performed by the same worker who makes the actual weld.

I hope this article has brought you a step closer to a better understanding of plastic welding and the things that you have to be considered in order to make a quality weld. In my next article I will discuss "The Splicing of Thermoplastic Materials".

For more information, click on the Author Biography link at the top of this page.

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