Wood composites are taking on a lot of new shapes besides simple deck boards. They’re replacing fancy millwork and routed parts, where high filler levels hold a net shape without creep. New parts include post ends, toilet seats, carpenter’s levels, door and window sills, office partitions, roofing shingles, and flooring.
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| Composites are being injection and compression
molded into a variety of new products like these compression molded Enviroshakes, containing wood and other natural fibers plus reclaimed tire rubber. (Photo: Wellington Polymer Technology) |
Newer applications are being made with a lot of processes that are new for wood composites, like injection and compression molding and dual-belt forming. Some of these new methods are also being used to make traditional decking. It’s all part of a ferment of product and process development in the emerging wood-plastic composites field. At the cutting edge
of this market, some parts don’t even look like wood.
Wood-composite profiles have been an extrusion success story
for over a decade. Profiles still account for 97% of all wood-filled
products, according to Principia Partners, a research firm in
Exton, Pa. Most profiles are decks and railings, plus small amounts
of window and door components, Venetian blinds, and pencils.
Developments
at Crane Plastics Manufacturing in Columbus, Ohio, illustrate
two trends in extruded profiles. One is toward more complex hollow
composite profiles, such as wood/PE office partitions. Another
is toward new applications for simple rectangular profiles. Crane
is extruding the lower parts of door frames using wood/PE. These
profiles are joined to natural wood and then milled and primed
as one piece.
The first injection molded wood composites are probably only
four years old, and they still make up only 3% of wood composites
volume, or 19 million lb/yr, according to Principia, which excludes
compression molding from its market totals.
Decking
drives most of the demand for injection molded wood-plastic
finials, skirts, and end caps that cover the cut ends of decking
profiles. Decking is growing at close to 20% with a steady influx
of new capital as smaller producers are being taken over by bigger
companies. Carney Timber Co. bought Xtendex decking earlier this
year; Universal Forest Products acquired EverX decking; and at
least one other deal is in the works.
Trex Co., which makes more decking than the rest
of the industry combined, is growing too, thanks to a deal
signed earlier this year with Home Depot. Trex is building its
third plant in Olive Branch, Miss.
That deal and others like it
will necessarily boost injection molded composites, which will
grow 70% a year for the next four years, Principia predicts.
By comparison, the overall injection molding business will grow
only around 4% a year. One custom molder, Atlas Precision Plastics
in Arden, N.C., says its wood composites business has grown from
nothing four years ago to 40% of its business now.
Injection molding wood
Molded caps and skirts for decks and posts must match the deck
in color and texture and weather in the same way. Some decking
companies make their molded parts in-house. Many outsource some
or all to custom molders, though perhaps no more than a dozen
injection molders have experience molding wood.
The first
molded parts were simple and basic. In 2000, the maker
of Xtendex decking in Barrie, Ont. (now part of Carney), was
one of the first to injection mold board ends and post caps.
The board ends were initially plain right angles that overhung
the end of the board. Now Carney uses a more elegant half-round
cylinder that fits flush into the board end.
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| Demand for decks is creating
a secondary market for matching injection molded trim. Molders
who can work with composites see many other possibilities. Meanwhile,
extruded wood composites are moving toward more complex millwork.
(Photo: TimberTech) |
“At first I didn’t
think this injection molding development would go anywhere,” recalls
Stewart Kemper, president of TimberTech in Wilmington, Ohio,
the decking division of profile extruder Crane Plastics. “But
the quality has gotten better. Some modifications had to be made
to the formula to make it work, and it has gotten more consistent.” Last
year, after long-term development, TimberTech introduced its
first injection molded post caps and skirts, molded both in-house
and by outside vendors. “Now we’re looking at
a variety of projects,” Kemper says.
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| New applications are driving
extruded wood-composite profiles toward more complex shapes,
like Crane Plastics' profiles for office partitions. |
Decking producers Brite Manufacturing
(maker of Lifelong decking), Carney (Xtendex), Composatron
(Premier), Correct Building Products (CorrectDeck), Fiber Composites
(Fiberon), Louisiana-Pacific (Weatherbest), Master Mark Plastics
(Rhino), and U.S. Plastic Lumber (Carefree) also produce at least
some of their injection molded parts captively.
Makers of decking are extremely secretive about their
composite moldings, whether made in-house or outsourced.
High wood content prevents sink marks. But only a couple of custom
molders can achieve close to the same high-fiber levels in molded
parts as in extruded profiles. Blue Ridge Industries in Winchester,
Va., molds post skirts and tops for Trex that do have about the
same loading of wood as in its decking, Trex says. Trex, also
in Winchester, puts about 50% wood in its PE deck profiles. Atlas
has molded 45%-wood parts for Fiberon decks and rails from Fiber
Composites in New London, N.C. Atlas says it can mold up to 60%
wood.
Most injection molded composites, however, use far less
wood or other fillers than the decks and rails they match. “Above
25% filler, the changes in rheology are considerable,” says
Peter Simko, senior engineer at Carney. Carney’s end pieces,
molded in house for Xtendex decking have only 20% fiber vs. 50%
in the decking. The composites are filled primarily with rice
hulls, flax, and hemp and only occasionally include wood fiber.
The fibers also
have to be shorter for molding. Typically deck makers use
extrusion-grade wood fiber, which is 30 to 40 mesh, whereas 60
to 80 mesh works better in injection molding, says William Crostic,
president of Onaga Composites, which compounds wood-filled pellets
for injection molding.
The type of wood is also critical
for injection molding, whereas extrusion is more forgiving. “You
have to know the shear properties of the wood. Oak shears more
quickly than pine and burns faster,” says Robert Bulla,
sales manager for Atlas. “You can mold 60% pine with
no problem, but you couldn’t get to 60% with oak.”
Drying wood-filled pellets is
far more critical for injection molding than for extrusion
because injection presses aren’t typically vented. Lack
of venting also leads to corrosion. Oak flour, which is high
in tannic acid, corrodes injection molds, whereas pine flour
doesn’t. Maple has the least
undesirable outgassing. But pine contains terpenes, which
are gummy. Pine also is easier to color, but has a lower flex
modulus than oak.
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| These examples of more complex
composite profiles were produced in Europe. (Photo: Cincinnati
Extrusion GmbH) |
Some injection molded
composites look more like profiles but take advantage of
molding to incorporate seals and weather strips as inserts to
save secondary labor. Atlas and Dinesol Plastics Inc. in Niles,
Ohio, both mold door sills with such inserts for Z Series doors
from Endura Products in Greensboro, N.C.
A
couple of custom molders have developed sophisticated processes
using coinjection and foaming. “A lot of people think a
wood composite has to replace wood or look like wood, but that’s
not true,” says Atlas’s Bulla. “It’s
just a filled resin. If you color the composite black, most
of the wood fiber disappears. You can also heat the tooling so
the polymer comes to the surface and the fiber disappears, just
the way fiberglass does.”
Atlas molds some
shiny white PVC trim parts that look painted, but aren’t,
and show no fiber at all. Atlas also is developing cabinet
doors that have a shiny white styrenic surface.
Another unusual recent development is a coinjected
toilet seat with a wood-filled core and a shiny white surface
of polypropylene with no wood. It’s molded
by Centoco Plastics in Windsor, Ont., which has a patent
on the process.
Foaming agents are used in tiny amounts to help pack out
injection molded parts. One molder uses 0.016% blowing agent
to prevent sink marks. Typically blowing agents are used at levels
of 1% to 2%.
New ways to precompound
Injection molding wood-filled composites is costlier than extruding
them because injection molding requires pre-compounded and predried
material. All of the material doesn’t have to be precompounded,
however. “A 60% wood-fiber
concentrate works well in injection molding,” Onaga’s
Crostic notes.
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| Trim parts for Trex's decking
are custom molded with the same high wood-fiber level-about 50%-as
its decking. Molding with high wood content is tough to do but
means the trim will weather like the deck. |
Brite Manufacturing in Bolton, Ont., supplies regrind
from its extruded Lifelong decking to a nearby custom molder
that produces Brite’s injection
molded components.
One processor is also trying a Pallmann model PFV Plast-Agglomerator
to preblend and dry wood flour and plastic before it feeds
a counter-rotating twin-screw extruder. The agglomerator softens
the plastic, but doesn’t
melt it, allowing moisture to escape from the wood. It operates
in continuous mode, forcing agglomerated material through holes
in a die, where it is cut into pellets by rotating knives. To
distinguish its agglomerator from typical batch types, Pallmann
recently re-christened the machine the “Palltruder.” Two
Palltruders said to be capable of processing up to 80% wood-filled
compounds were delivered to U.S. customers this summer. One unit
went for a decking application and one to the test lab of extruder
builder American Maplan in McPherson, Kan.
Compression molding wood
Compression molding has also been used recently for wood composites,
though most compression molded products use mixtures of natural
fibers with wood as one option. Epoch Composites Inc. in Lamar,
Mo., compression molds wood-filled decking using HDPE and wood
flour in 12- to 20-ft sections and four colors. Epoch has compression
molded its planks for five years. Epoch is building a new plant
this year to increase its capacity.
Compression molding tends
to be more limited than other processes in throughput capacity,
but it has the advantage of not breaking fibers, Epoch notes.
Compression molding can also incorporate higher wood loadings
than injection molding. One compression molder in Arkansas makes
handles and other small parts using up to 80% wood in HDPE. Compression
molding is also forgiving of compound variations since material
doesn’t have to flow through narrow mold passages.
Wellington
Polymer Technology Inc. in Chatham, Ont., compression molds
Enviroshake composite shingles to look like taper-split 12 x
20 in. cedar shakes. They contain high filler loadings, intentionally
varied to give the shakes random thickness. Ninety percent of
the mix is a combination of post-industrial PE and PP film, crumb
rubber from tires, and natural fiber. Most of the fiber is flax,
but wood fiber or hemp are substituted when available. The other
10% is a mix of nine chemical additives and processing aids.
Wellington runs one fully automated compression molding line
whose output is limited by the dwell time on the clamp cycle.
They are adding a second line this fall.
Another new
building product—flooring—is being developed
with an unusual composite process. Called Thermofix, it’s
a a dual-belt forming technology developed by Schilling-Knobel
GmbH in Germany (represented here by Zima Corp.). The process
compresses composite pellets between two heated PTFE belts to
form a continuous sheet up to 0.75 in. thick. The granules are
60% wood flour and 40% flexible PVC and are produced in a Palltruder.
The first commercial Thermofix line is in the Czech Republic
and a second will go to the Toronto area to make wood-composite
flooring from recycled carpet tiles.
One compression molder of wood and natural-fiber composites
uses a pellet mill to compound a highly filled mix. This
method doesn’t
actually cut the pellets, but extrudes blobs that look
like piles of thick rope. Later the blobs are ground into chips.
Fiber substitution grows
Injection and compression molders are modifying their
formulations and replacing some wood filler with agricultural
fibers like hemp, flax, rice hulls, or wheat straw. Some are
partially substituting mineral fillers like talc, and one patented
process uses starch in place of some of the wood. Blends of fillers
reportedly can improve stiffness, creep resistance and other
properties.
Processors also add other fillers to wood fiber to avoid
drying. Luzenac America, which sells mineral fillers, notes
that wood-composite profiles absorb up to 23% moisture after
extrusion. Adding about 30% talc, however, cuts moisture absorption
in half.
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| Newer composites don’t
necessarily look like wood. Atlas Precision uses special techniques
to mask the wood fibers with a resin-rich surface in these injection
molded PVC trim pieces. |
Substituting “agro fibers” for wood can have drawbacks.
Flax, for example, is especially abrasive on tooling. Users report
that agro fibers also have strong smells. Flax’s odor when
heated is compared to rotten fish. Wheat straw smells like manure.
Hemp smells like marijuana (though suppliers dispute this), and
rice hulls like toasted cereal. Such smells will dissipate from
molded parts and won’t matter much if the part is used
outdoors like decking or shingles. But smell could be a factor
in kitchen cabinets or car interior parts.
Fasalex, a new Austrian venture-capital firm, has a patented
process and formula combining wood flour, resin, and starch.
Starch adds stiffness and draws moisture away from the wood flour.
Fasalex says using starch allows it to process wood flour containing
as much as 12% moisture without predrying. Fasalex provides processing
and formulation know-how. It works with three Austrian equipment
suppliers: Greiner Extrusionstechnik and Technoplast Kunststofftechnik
(which has a U.S. office) for tooling and Cincinnati Extrusion
(which will come to the U.S. next year) for conical twin-screw
extruders.
Fasalex
doesn’t require customers to take a license, but it
sells a formulation and a proprietary additive. Josko Fenster
und Turen GmbH in Austria is a development partner of Fasalex
and uses its material to make door and window profiles.
Fasalex also sells precompounded materials. LEX
452 contains 70% wood, 20% starch, and 10% of a polymer
normally used in glue, plus additives. LEX 468 is 75% wood, 10%
starch, and 15% PP plus additives. And LEX 474 is 60% wood, 10%
starch, and 30% PVC with additives. Precompounded materials reportedly
make thinner walls in extrusion than direct-compounded materials—e.g.,
1.5-mm walls with precompounded material vs. 2.5 mm
with direct compounding, Fasalex claims. An equivalent wood-starch-plastic
formulation for injection molding is called Fasal.
An unusual combination of mineral and wood-based
fiber was patented by Kadant Composites, which was established
eight years ago to develop commercial applications for the sludge
left over from paper making. First Kadant created a porous, granular
material (1.5 g/cc density) called Biodac out of the fine kaolin,
calcium carbonate, and short cellulose fibers used in paper.
Because the granules are porous, they fill up with plastic in
compounding, giving unusual strength properties. Three years
ago Kadant used Biodac to formulate composite decking, called
Geodeck, out of equal parts Biodac, HDPE, and additional cellulose
fibers. Kadant now sells over 10 million lb/yr of Geodeck, a
ribbed profile that comes with injection molded end caps that
Kadant makes itself.
University R&D programs are also testing ways to improve
composite properties. Univ. of Toronto researcher Tieqi Li proposes
using an extrusion grade of HMW-HDPE instead of standard resin
to improve composite properties. Conventional wisdom had been
that wood composites need lower-MW/lower-viscosity PE to wet
out fibers and provide good flow, even though a higher-viscosity
resin could contribute greater strength. But Li found the processability
of wood composites was determined more by the wood fiber than
by the molecular weight of the polymer.
Conventional wisdom also held that longer fibers are stronger
than shorter ones. Univ. of Idaho (Moscow) researcher Lance Gallagher
found that ball-milling 100-mesh wood fiber to sizes as small
as 20 microns increased the filler’s
surface area, so that polymer bonded better and yielded higher
tensile strength. A 50% loading of 100-micron fibers in HDPE
had ultimate tensile strength of 3190 psi, Gallagher reported,
while the same loading of 38-micron fiber had breaking strength
of 3625 psi, a 14% increase. Processability also improves with
shorter fibers.