July 14, 2022

How bakelite is manufactured?

blog aco mold

Table of Contents

Bakelite is an old trade name for Phenolic thermoset plastic which was developed by Leo Bakeland about 100 years ago. Phenolic resins are the result of a condensation reaction of phenol and formaldehyde. There are two basic phenolic resins, Resole (single-stage) and Novolac (two-stage), novolac being the more common. Resole is truly thermosetting with heat, while novolac requires a catalyst to supply the additional formaldehyde needed for crosslinking. The catalyst is typically hexamethylenetetramine. Molding materials are typically filled with cellulose or mineral and are compounded either on rolls or twin screw extruder.

If you intend to purchase the base phenolic resin and what you are interested in is the compounding. If that is correct, you will want to buy the Novolac (two-stage) resin. The step by step process to compound phenolic isn’t that complicated, but a through explanation would take more time and space than can be presented here. The very simple explanation is that all the necessary raw materials are premixed in a ribbon blender at room temperature and then sent to either heated calender rolls or a twin screw extruder. If sent to rolls, the sheets are cooled and sent to a grinder and the granulated material is then screen classified to remove overs and fines. If an extruder is used, there is some process to make pellets, either a die and strands or die and fly knife cutter. Putting in a compounding operation is a bigger deal than you might think. Back when I was in the industry I had customers with similar usage and they bought material from a compounder (the company I worked for). They could not justify the cost of all the equipment needed for compounding.

Injection molding
of phenolic has been around most of the 40 years I’ve been in the industry. Although it’s not conventional (same as thermoplastic) equipment it is quite similar. It does take a special screw and a jacketed barrel, the basic concept is the same as thermoplastic injection molding and the same basic machine can be used with the proper modifications to the screw and barrel. In my opinion, this is the easy part and the part that is already being done by REHA, the complicated part is compounding the resin into a molding compound. Compounding is not really something that I would suggest a molder take on.

Related Blogs

blog aco mold
Plastic Injection Molding for Toys
Many plastic toys are made through injection molding, toys made in plastic have advantages of good strength, light weight, colorful decoration, complex design are possible, economic. China is the biggest...
blog aco mold
The depth/width of ribs on plastic parts
The plastic part designers are not necessarily wise in the design of plastic parts, or of manufacturing technicalities. Lots of people look at plastic parts and don't have a clue...
blog aco mold
Moldflow 2014
Many things have changed and hopefully many new things will be added in Moldflow 2014 which will give the Designer and Mold designer freedom to make decision based on actual...
blog injection molding
Injection moulding simulation tools
Whether the injection moulding simulations software (not only Moldflow) are 90% or 95% or 99% accurate or not: we should remember that these tools (or many of these tools) have...
P03 MOLD DESIGN
How to be a Best Injection Mold Tool Designer?
——The Path to Becoming an Outstanding Injection Mold Designer in China Introduction: The Value and Challenges of Injection Mold Design In the era of automotive lightweighting and consumer electronics miniaturization,...
blog aco mold
Wall thickness of injection molded parts
Many years ago we molded golf clubs driving heads much thicker than 25mm. One solution (also used for a number of other thick walled products) was to mold an insert...

Tell us your request right now and contact us today about getting started on your next project together!

Email:
sales@acomold.com

Or Fill Out The Contact Form Below:

Support Your Business with Better Molding Solution

Contact Info
Copyright © 2024, ACO Mold. Terms of Service and Privacy Policy. All rights reserved.  Powered by ACO MOLD.
1 1.png

Join Our Network

Please email to sales@acomold.com
or fill out the contact form below: