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Abstract 01
Supercritical Extraction of Binders for
Metal Injection Moulded Components
A common bottleneck of the powder injection
moulding technique is the inevitable debinding step. The debinding
process is very time-consuming because of the risk of deformations
and flaws, especially for thick-walled parts. A newly implemented
debinding technique that has proven to be efficient for certain
organic binder systems is supercritical CO2 extraction.
CO2 is a supercritical fluid when the pressure is above 73.8 bar
and the temperature is above 31.0° C. The feature of a supercritical
fluid is that the viscosity is like gas, the density is like liquid
and the diffusion coefficient lies between those of gas and liquid.
This implies that the fluid diffuses into an injection moulded
component more like a gas and dissolves the binder more like a
liquid. The dissolved binder will then be transported out from
the component by diffusion. The non-polar CO2 will primarily dissolve
small and medium-sized, non-polar hydrocarbons like paraffin and,
to a limited extent, stearic acid and beeswax, but not high-molecule
polymers. Another characteristic of supercritical CO2 is that
it has no surface tension, which means that no capillary forces
will appear during extraction.
In this particular project, a medium pressure injection moulding
machine from Goceram AB was used to produce parts for the supercritical
CO2 extraction experiments. Feedstock containing 65 vol% stainless
316L steel, mixed with a binder system of paraffin, stearic acid
and polymer was injection moulded in various geometries for subsequent
extraction in supercritical CO2. After a complete extraction cycle
at 200 bar and 60° C for six hours, approximately 90 % of the
paraffin was removed. Residual paraffin, stearic acid and polymer
were thermally burned out in a couple of hours. Despite the rapid
burnout, no powder bed was needed either to support the parts
or for any wicking process.
Summarised, the advantages of supercritical CO2 extraction are
reduced debinding times, dispensable powder embedment, improved
surface finish, production of more thick-walled parts and no rearrangement
of particles during the process. In addition, all extracted paraffin
can be reused without any refinement, which makes the process
environmentally friendly.
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