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A review on the importance of surface coating of micro/nano-mold in micro/nano-molding processes

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TLDR
In this paper, the physical, mechanical and tribological properties of various surface coatings and their impact on the replication efficiency and lifetime of micro/nano-molds that are used in micro-nano hot-embossing and injection molding processes are discussed.
Abstract
Micro/nano hot-embossing and injection molding are two promising manufacturing processes for the mass production of workpieces bearing micro/nanoscale features. However, both the workpiece and micro/nano-mold are susceptive to structural damage due to high thermal stress, adhesion and friction, which occur at the interface between the workpiece and the mold during these processes. Hence, major constraints of micro/nano-molds are mainly attributed to improper replication and their inability to withstand a prolonged sliding surface contact because of high sidewall friction and/or high adhesion. Consequently, there is a need for proper surface coating as it can improve the surface properties of micro/nano-molds such as having a low friction coefficient, low adhesion and low wear rate. This review deals with the physical, mechanical and tribological properties of various surface coatings and their impact on the replication efficiency and lifetime of micro/nano-molds that are used in micro/nano hot-embossing and injection molding processes.

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Citations
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Frictional Characteristics of Atomically-Thin Sheets

TL;DR: Using friction force microscopy, the nanoscale frictional characteristics of atomically thin sheets of graphene, molybdenum disulfide, niobium diselenide, and hexagonal boron nitride are compared to those of their bulk counterparts, suggesting that the trend arises from the thinner sheets’ increased susceptibility to out-of-plane elastic deformation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Micro-nanostructured polymer surfaces using injection molding: A review

TL;DR: In this article, the influence of processing parameters on the quality of final parts and the precision of final product dimensions in both thermoplastic polymers and rubber materials is discussed and compared.
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Solvent-aided direct adhesion of a metal/polymer joint using micro/nano hierarchical structures

TL;DR: In this article, a new direct adhesion method is introduced that does not require additional heat management and instead makes use of an organic solvent, which is used to bond micro/nanostructured aluminum and acrylonitrile butadiene styrene.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Injection moulding of ultra high aspect ratio nanostructures using coated polymer tooling

TL;DR: In this article, a method was developed to replicate ultra high aspect ratio (UHAR) nanopillars by injection molding with failure rates lower than one pillar in a thousand.
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The force of adhesion between solid surfaces in contact

TL;DR: In this article, it was shown that the adhesive force and the peripheral attractive force are equal to one-half the difference between the apparent Hertz load and the applied load when two elastic solids of known interfacial and surface energies are placed in contact.
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Bacterial chemotaxis transverse to axial flow in a microfluidic channel

TL;DR: A comparison of theChemotactic band behavior in the absence and presence of flow showed that fluid velocity did not significantly impede chemotactic migration in the transverse direction, allowing real‐time visualization of bacterial distributions within the channel.
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Graphene-coated Si mold for precision glass optics molding

TL;DR: A coating using carbide-bonded graphene is introduced to build nonstick Si molds for glass molding, enabling the use of Si as a mold material to fabricate sophisticated structures with high-precision dimensions that was not previously available.
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Performance evaluation of PVD coatings for high pressure die casting

TL;DR: In this article, several physical vapour deposited (PVD) coatings, namely, TiN, CrN and TiCN, were evaluated for their ability to eliminate soldering during high pressure die casting of aluminium alloys.
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