It varies greatly with circumstances, but the critical time is the transition from fully amorphous to semi crystalline.
The slower the transition, the more perfect and bigger the crystals. The more perfect the crystals the higher the shrinkage.
Things that influence it are initial melt temperature or just how much kinetic energy is stored in the molecules to break the forces of attraction between molecules.
The strength of the forces of attraction is directly related by the distance between the charged points. Force=1/distance squared.
In a semi crystalline polymer the crystalline regions have the molecules pretty well lined up at fairly uniform separation so the bonds are close and strong and uniform so the crystalline melting point is tightly defined.
The amorphous areas are randomly aligned and the bond length and alignment vary greatly so each bond breaks at a different temperature.
Nylon 11 has both crystalline and amorphous areas. As you heat it up the weakest bonds break first and it starts to soften. As the heat increases more and more bonds break and it gets softer until it gets to the crystalline melting point, where most of the remaining bonds break in rapid succession and the polymer is liquid.
On cooling, it depends on how many of the original bonds where broken and if any crystals remain. At thermoforming temperatures, the temperatures are often just below the crystalline melting point where the weaker bonds are broken, but the strongest remain in tact.
the slower the cooling the longer it takes for the crystals to reform and become more perfect. It is a dynamic process where everything is rearranging itself into a more relaxed position.
10 seconds cooling time really means nothing. rate of temperature change is the crucial measurement and that is also dynamic.
The presence of nucleating agents also has a strong influence as they increase speed of crystallisation and increase the number of crystals, but also tend to form less perfect crystals as there is less time for repeated rearrangements. Remember the kinetic energy (temperature) in the molecule is directly related to the strength of the bonds that will be broken or formed or where they can be formed broken reformed a few times to reach a more stable (stronger bond) state.
Also cooling air temperature and motion are not defined.
The official crystalline melting point for nylon 11 is 185 to 190 deg C and typical mould shrinkage is 1.9%.
In the absence of data specifically for nylon 11 I would guess that the extremes are 1.0% to 2.5%
what would 10% everywhere as formed and 1.0% on the outside rad and 2.5% at the inside rad do to the angle.
As the parameters are so poorly defined I can only take a wild guess, but
Regards
Pat
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