Back Pressure in Injection Molding: How It Affects Melt Quality and Defects

Back pressure in injection molding is the resistance applied to the screw during plasticizing. Correct back pressure can improve melt uniformity, color mixing and shot consistency, while excessive or unstable back pressure can increase shear heat, degrade material, trap gas and contribute to defects such as bubbles, splay, burn marks or color streaks.

Back pressure is often treated as a machine setting, but buyers see its effect as part quality. When a molded part has bubbles, splay, color swirl or inconsistent dimensions, plasticizing stability should be reviewed along with drying, gate design and venting.

Injection molding back pressure process control with screw barrel model pressure gauge color mixing bubbles and splay defect samples
Back pressure affects melt mixing, plasticizing stability, trapped gas, color dispersion and heat history in injection molding.

What Back Pressure Changes

The right setting depends on resin, screw design, colorant, regrind, shot size and cycle time. It should be adjusted with process data, not guessed.

Back pressure effectBenefit when controlledRisk when excessive
Melt mixingBetter color and additive dispersionToo much shear heat.
Shot consistencyMore stable cushion and part weightLonger recovery time.
Air removalCan help compact meltCan also trap or overheat gas if process is poor.
Material temperatureMore uniform meltDegradation in heat-sensitive plastics.
Color changeImproved dispersionPurging may take longer.

Defects Linked to Poor Back Pressure Control

  • Color streaks or poor masterbatch dispersion.
  • Bubbles or voids caused by inconsistent plasticizing and trapped gas.
  • Splay from excess shear heat, moisture or gas.
  • Burn marks or odor from overheating sensitive materials.
  • Inconsistent part weight or dimensions from unstable shot preparation.

Material-Specific Notes

Back pressure should be balanced with drying, melt temperature, screw speed and residence time, especially for moisture-sensitive or heat-sensitive materials.

재료Back pressure concernProcess note
PCMoisture and heat sensitivityDry well and avoid excessive shear heat.
나일론Moisture and fiber orientationControl drying and mixing consistency.
ABSColor and surface qualityUse enough mixing without overheating.
POMDegradation risk if overheatedKeep within safe processing window.
TPE / TPUShear and moisture sensitivityBalance mixing, drying and gate design.

Internal Links for Defect Troubleshooting

Back pressure is one lever in a larger molding process review. It should not be used to hide material drying, DFM or mold venting problems.

자주 묻는 질문

What is back pressure in injection molding?

Back pressure is the resistance applied to the screw during plasticizing. It affects melt mixing, shot consistency and material heat history.

Does higher back pressure improve molded part quality?

Not always. Moderate back pressure can improve mixing, but excessive back pressure can overheat material, increase shear and cause defects.

Can back pressure cause splay or bubbles?

Poor back pressure control can contribute to splay, bubbles or gas-related defects, especially when combined with moisture, overheating or poor venting.

Should buyers specify back pressure in an RFQ?

Usually no. Buyers should specify material, part requirements and defects observed. The molder should set and document process parameters during validation.

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