Definition
Dryer is the equipment that reduces resin moisture before molding, preventing hydrolysis (chemical degradation), splay (silver streaks), bubbles and unstable dimensions. It is mandatory for hygroscopic resins (PA, PC, PET, ABS, PBT).
Dryer types
- Hot-air: ambient air heated to 80 – 90 °C. Inexpensive but limited to non-hygroscopic resins. Cannot drive moisture below ambient.
- Desiccant: dry air regenerated with molecular sieves (zeolites) or silica gel. Standard -40 °C dew point. Industry standard.
- Vacuum: accelerated moisture removal under vacuum. Drying time 1/3 of desiccant. Expensive but fast.
- Compressed-air dryer: chilled compressed air + filtration. For small volumes.
Typical parameters by resin
| Resin | Drying T | Time | Dew point |
|---|---|---|---|
| ABS | 80 – 90 °C | 2 – 4 h | -25 °C |
| PA 6, PA 66 | 80 °C | 4 – 8 h | -40 °C |
| PC | 120 °C | 4 – 6 h | -40 °C |
| PET | 160 – 175 °C | 4 – 6 h | -40 °C |
| PBT | 120 °C | 3 – 4 h | -40 °C |
| PMMA | 80 – 90 °C | 2 – 4 h | -25 °C |
System components
- Drying hopper with diffuser / internal cone
- Air heater (electric)
- Circulation blower
- Inlet / outlet filters
- Regenerable desiccant bed
- PID temperature control + dew-point sensor
Common mistakes
- Drying temperature too low: moisture not driven down enough
- Too high: degradation / hopper sticking
- Insufficient time: especially when switching from virgin to regrind (more hygroscopic)
- Dew-point sensor out of service: desiccant saturated or regeneration failed
- Loss of dry air between dryer and machine hopper (uninsulated)
Synonyms