XtraSoft

XtraSoft™ is the result of using Intellimold to combine two or more materials that are simultaneously injected into the mold cavity to produce a core and skin affect. The core and the skin are bonded together through boundary layers that contain both materials. Unlike co-injection, the two materials do not form totally separate layers. There is a partial physical infiltration of the skin into the core resulting in a stronger bond between the layers. When the melt enters the cavity, it begins to cool from the outside inwards, but the stiffer material freezes first. As it does so, it shrinks away from the mold wall, leaving a gap around 70 microns across. The still-liquid softer polymer is squeezed out of the mix, filling the gap just created.

Intellimold is able to injection mold "non-mixable" materials compared to conventional molding. Non-mixable materials refers to materials that are not more than partially soluble within each other, substantially retain their identity when mixed, and do not chemically degrade or decompose each other. By using the Intellimold process control, a substantial Internal Melt Pressure builds within the molten material (i.e. the mixture of non-mixable materials). The material with the highest modulus will begin to solidify faster, with stronger shrinkage forces squeezing out and separating the lower modulus material that is still liquid.

   

Only by having total control of the mold internal pressure can this unmixing phenomenon be consistently reproduced. The counter-pressure creates a situation in which the liquid is all at the same pressure, so the stiffer material will stay in the center of the mold, wrapped up in a uniform layer of the softer material.

XtraSoft requires multiple polymers that are chemically compatible, are partially miscible, do not degrade each other, have similar melting points, but have differences in  flex modulus of at least 150,000 psi. Material separation depends on the relationship between flex modulus and temperature. When the melt hits the cavity wall and begins to cool, the two materials quickly separate "like water separating from oil." The one with the higher modulus forms the core because it freezes first it goes through glass transition state and begins to shrink, squeezing out the lower modulus material, which forms the skin.  While the process is ideally suited to combinations of polypropylene and a thermoplastic elastomer like AES’s Santoprene™, it can be used with a wide variety of materials and material combinations.

Xtrasoft can be used to make parts with cores made in low-cost regrind and a higher-cost skin. The ratio of the two materials should be unlimited. It is even possible to process more than two materials together. Since XtraSoft provides true soft touch application, it replaces soft touch paint, co-injection or two-shot molding in many applications.

The photo on the right highlights how the internal melt pressure squeezes the lower modulus santoprene material to the surface. The larger “building blocks” or heavier flex mod material forms the core.