When engineering-grade resins were introduced in the 1950s, some auto manufacturers were unfamiliar with the benefits of metal-to-plastic conversion, i.e. how to design plastics into products, and how to manufacture with plastics. Today this practice, also known as “lightweighting,” is becoming increasingly popular with automakers as they race to comply with a federal mandate calling for automobiles to average 54.5 miles per gallon by 2025.
Converting existing metal products or parts to plastic increases fuel efficiency because metal is far heavier than plastic and, with proper design, engineered plastic parts can be just as strong as metal and cost less. Plastics’ chemical resistance and heat resistance, combined with their lighter weight, make them especially useful for fuel systems, fluid handling systems and other under-the-hood, high-temperature applications.
With developments in materials and technologies, plastics like polyether ether ketone (PEEK) are being used for vehicle body components and an increasing number of working parts. Some common applications include piston rings in automatic transmissions and wear plates in gear systems.
Other engineered plastics have dampening qualities that absorb vibration better than metal, and can be formulated to be thermally and electrically conductive. This makes them ideal for use in electromagnetic interference (EMI), radio frequency interference (RFI) shields, and acceptable for certain types of heat sinks.
With appropriate design, plastic parts can perform as well as metal in many automotive applications. For example, plastic parts can achieve the same tight tolerances, but require fewer secondary manufacturing operations. Including additives such as glass-fiber and carbon-fiber can help plastics deliver comparable tensile strength in certain components like brackets and exterior panels.
Plastics also exceed metal in several key areas. This includes highly repeatable production with less scrap, up to six times longer tool life, enhanced regulatory compliance, and greater design flexibility.
Until recently, most engineers who worked primarily with metal parts were not familiar with the history or success of reinforced plastics. Here are a few of the reasons why this metal-centric perspective is rapidly fading from the scene.
Competition has become tough in the global automotive marketplace and operations are squeezed to be lean.
Let’s say you are using a metal part. If a plastic part is just as good as the metal part, if not better, why change to plastic if there’s no compelling performance advantage? The answer is because in addition to meeting specs for durability, strength and style, injection- or insert-molded plastic improves product quality and reduces costs in seven key areas:
There are more than 25,000 off-the shelf engineered plastic materials, each with its own application-specific properties. If needed, higher-performance blends and hybrids can be custom-designed to meet very specific performance requirements. There are several considerations needed to leverage the key characteristics of plastics to best align the material with the project. These include:
· Base material selection: Each base material has its own set of advantages and disadvantages. To determine the ideal material type for your application, identify critical project requirements such as chemical resistance, impact, flow, processing, etc.
· Additives: Plastic additives are used to improve a material’s properties such as strength, rigidity, UV resistance and flame resistance. Some of the most common additives include:
Injection molding is faster, more efficient and can achieve higher tolerances compared to making automotive die-cast metal parts. In fact, it is easier to make complex, high-performance parts or products with highly controlled injection molding processes that require fewer steps, especially as it relates to secondary operations, part consolidation and inventory maintenance. In addition, plastic molding tools can last 500,000-1,000,000 cycles longer than those used for die-casting, and require less maintenance and downtime.
Style is a critical element of automotive designs, and plastics give engineers greater latitude to innovate. By making a wider range of geometrical possibilities possible, plastics help designers think in more creative ways about complex forms, performance in harsh environments, shielding considerations, weight and structural limits, thermal management, and product differentiation—both for performance and aesthetics.
It’s important to note that directly substituting plastic for metal in a design rarely works because the differences in mechanical properties of plastics and metals will affect product performance. In most cases however, a smart designer can easily compensate for these variations by adding reinforcement features like ribs, gussets, thicker walls and radii.
Determining how a plastic performs in the end-user environment often depends on prototype testing (for example, analyzing post-mold shrinkage and warpage). For automotive safety, it is especially important is to evaluate plastics for strength, hardness, flexibility, corrosion resistance, fatigue and long-term creep. Metals, being much more thermally conductive (without as much hysteretic loss), don’t necessarily present the same challenges. As such, testing needs to be appropriate to capture true fatigue resistance and creep. In general, metal creep does not exist at typical, everyday usage temperatures and loads. On the other hand, if plastic parts are not designed correctly, they can creep, stress or relax.
In conclusion, engineered plastics already offer many advantages, including lighter weight, parts consolidation, net shape components, aesthetic improvements and better durability. Meanwhile, material suppliers continue to develop high-strength thermoplastics that are increasingly resistant to impact, corrosion and heat. As a result, more auto suppliers are converting from metal components to plastic.