Powder injection moulding of metallic and ceramic micro parts

2011 
Industrial use of micro components is determined by the availability of efficient manufacturing techniques. While micro injection moulding of plastic is common practice, metal and ceramic powder injection moulding (PIM) still is under development. High-pressure and low-pressure injection moulding methods complement each other ideally, covering the entire spectrum from prototype to large-scale production. With high-pressure PIM, micro gear wheels with diameters <300 μm can be fabricated using LIGA mould inserts. Densities between 97 and 99% of the theoretical values are achieved. Apart from oxide ceramics, metal materials like copper or powder metallurgical steels like 17-4PH or 316L are often applied. Multi-component injection moulding requires less mounting steps and, hence, offers decisive advantages for effective production of interesting material combinations like electrically conductive/insulating or hard/ductile. Studies relating to the fabrication of immobile as well as mobile shaft-wheel components were performed. Other activities focussed on in-mould labelling with foils containing ultra-fine particles to improve surface quality and detail accuracy. Low-pressure injection moulding allows for the manufacture of small series within 1–4 weeks at low cost. However, the process has features which are not compatible with high-pressure PIM. Although use of a low-viscous feedstock is associated with various benefits, low-pressure injection moulding has not met with acceptance in micro moulding.
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