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    Steel Selection for PFA Injection Molds

    2026-03-27 11:06:47 Injection Mold

    PFA (perfluoroalkoxy alkane) resin is a high-performance fluoroplastic widely used in chemical, medical, semiconductor, and fluid handling applications due to its excellent heat resistance, corrosion resistance, and non-stick properties. However, PFA requires extremely high molding conditions: processing temperatures reach 330–380°C, mold temperatures 180–220°C, and it releases trace corrosive gases such as hydrogen fluoride (HF) at high temperatures. Ordinary mold steels quickly corrode, rust, pit, or deform under such conditions. Therefore, PFA mold steels must meet four core requirements: high corrosion resistance, thermal stability, wear resistance, and high polishability.

    1. Core Requirements for PFA Mold Steels

    First, corrosion resistance to withstand HF vapor. Second, thermal stability to resist softening or cracking under long-term high temperatures. Third, wear resistance to endure high-viscosity melt flow. Fourth, superior polishability to prevent sticking and ensure smooth demolding.

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    2. Preferred Mold Steels

    S136 (1.2083) Stainless Steel

    S136 is the most widely used steel for precision, medical, and high-gloss PFA parts. With high chromium content, it offers excellent corrosion resistance and can be hardened to 48–52 HRC. It polishes to a mirror finish (Ra ≤ 0.1 μm), effectively preventing sticking and ensuring stable long-term production.

    H13 (1.2344 / SKD61) Hot Work Tool Steel

    H13 is preferred for high-volume, thick-walled PFA parts. It provides exceptional thermal fatigue resistance and high-temperature strength, maintaining hardness under prolonged high heat. After proper heat treatment, it achieves 48–52 HRC and excellent wear resistance. Chromium plating or nitriding is recommended to enhance corrosion resistance.

    Cronidur 30 High-Nitrogen Stainless Steel

    This premium grade offers superior corrosion and wear resistance for high-end semiconductor and medical PFA applications. It supports ultra-high polishing and extended mold life but is costly and difficult to machine.

    3. Economic Alternative Steels

    NAK80 pre-hardened steel is suitable for small-batch or trial production. It offers moderate corrosion resistance and good polishability without additional quenching. 316L stainless steel provides exceptional corrosion resistance for medical and food-grade applications but has low hardness and requires surface hardening.

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    4. Unacceptable Steels

    P20, 718, 45# steel, and general Cr12MoV are not corrosion-resistant or heat-stable enough for PFA and will rapidly corrode or fail.

    Table: PFA Mold Steel Selection Guide

    Steel GradeApplicationHardnessHeat TreatmentSurface TreatmentCost Level
    S136Precision, medical, medium volume48–52 HRCQuenching + TemperingMirror polish + Chrome platingMid-range
    H13High volume, long life, thick walls48–52 HRCQuenching + TemperingNitriding / Chrome platingMid-low
    Cronidur 30High-end, semiconductor, medical52–54 HRCQuenching + TemperingPVD / Ultra mirrorHigh-end
    NAK80Small batch, trial, non-precision35–40 HRCPre-hardenedPolish + Chrome platingEconomic

    5. Key Processing Recommendations

    Steels must undergo full tempering to relieve internal stress. Hardness between 48–52 HRC is optimal. Chrome plating, nitriding, or PVD coatings are strongly recommended to improve corrosion resistance and non-stick performance. Uniform cooling and rounded corners further reduce sticking and deformation.

    Conclusion

    PFA mold steel selection centers on corrosion resistance, heat resistance, wear resistance, and polishability. S136 is ideal for precision parts, H13 for mass production, Cronidur 30 for high-end applications, and NAK80 for small-batch trials. Combined with proper heat treatment and surface finishing, molds achieve high stability, long service life, and consistent PFA part quality.

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