By Genevive B. Mata


Many beautiful objects have been created by breathing air into a mass of colored, melted glass to form a hollow shape. The process dates back centuries, and in modern times has been transformed into an industrial application for producing plastic products, including containers, toys, medical devices and auto parts. That transition was made possible by the emergence of blow molding.

This industrial process starts with a basic, raw plastic form called a parison, a name taken from artisans for an unformed glob of melted, malleable glass. The parison is placed inside a mold via machinery and air is pumped in at pressures ranging from 25 to 150 psi, creating an even coating over the interior. That layer has a uniform thickness, and cools down rapidly.

The raw tubes of plastic are made primarily from pellets of polyethylene, polypropylene, or polyvinyl chloride. These are thermoplastics, which melt at a rate and consistency making them ideal for mass production. The tubes can be made to order in virtually any size and quantity needed for a particular job, and are inserted into the molds in rapid assembly-line fashion.

A parison can be shaped in a variety of ways. Screw-like machinery forces these masses into their molds during a process called extrusion. Almost immediately, pressurized air is sent through a tube into the center of the material and expands outward, creating precise shapes and surface details that can be rapidly and accurately reproduced.

This process can be continuous or intermittent, based on design requirements and quantities. Larger containers for juice or milk are often made using variants of the extrusion method, but other items are best produced through injection molding. Using this method, soft polymers are forced into a type of central pin, which is then inflated, cooled, and ejected.

Injection stretch molding is a similar method used mainly to create small items or individual serving bottles. Preforms are created through injection, cooled, and then reheated and stretched using the core rod. High pressure air is blown in to help form the shape within a metal mold. All three processes can be completed using plastics that can be recycled.

Plastics are derived from hydrocarbons, and there is no way to ignore their environmental impact. Less than five percent of total oil production goes to plastic production, however, and intensified recycling efforts help to balance the equation. Plastics are an integral part of modern life, and he cost benefits of using these production methods are proven.




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