Technical Deep Dive · Mould Engineering · Korean ISBM 2026
Cooling time accounts for 35–55% of every Korean ISBM cycle. The difference between a well-engineered cooling channel layout and a generic one is 1.5–3.5 seconds per cycle — which at 8-cavity, 16-hour shifts translates to KRW 40–95M additional annual revenue on the same machine and mould. This guide gives Korean producers the engineering basis to capture that difference.
Korean Ever-Power Engineering Desk · Ansan-si · May 2026
Korean ISBM Cooling Channel Design Reference — 2026
| Paramètre | PET standard | PETG / K-Beauty | PP Hot-Fill | Engineering Reason |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Channel diameter | 8–10mm | 8–10mm | 10–12mm | Larger diameter for PP: compensates for lower thermal conductivity of H13 steel used in hot-fill moulds |
| Depth from cavity (d) | 8–12mm | 8–10mm | 12–16mm | Closer to cavity = faster heat extraction; PETG closer for optical clarity; PP further to avoid over-cooling crystallinity |
| Channel pitch (p) | 2–2.5d | 1.8–2.2d | 2–3d | Pitch as multiple of channel depth; tighter pitch for PETG to ensure uniform surface temperature |
| Water inlet temperature | 8–12°C | 8–12°C | 10–25°C | PP: higher water temperature prevents over-rapid crystallinity quench; PET/PETG: cold water maximises heat extraction rate |
| Flow rate target | Re > 10,000 | Re > 10,000 | Re > 8,000 | Turbulent flow (Re > 4,000) is essential; Re > 10,000 ensures 3–4× higher heat transfer coefficient than laminar flow |
| Inlet-outlet ΔT max | ≤ 3°C | ≤ 2°C | ≤ 4°C | Large ΔT = non-uniform cavity cooling = wall thickness variation; PETG tighter for optical quality |
Korean ISBM cycle time optimisation — systematically addressed in the 5-lever Korean ISBM cycle time framework — identifies cooling as the lever with the highest absolute time savings potential. A typical 10-second Korean PET beverage cycle allocates time approximately as: injection 2.5s, conditioning transfer 1.0s, conditioning dwell 2.5s, blow 1.5s, cooling dwell 2.0s, ejection/rotation 0.5s. The 2.0-second cooling dwell in this example represents the time after blow air release before the bottle is rigid enough to eject without distortion — and this minimum cooling dwell is entirely determined by the mould’s cooling channel efficiency.
The ROI calculation for cooling channel improvement is direct: on a Korean 8-cavity ISBM mould at 10-second cycle running 16 hours/day, each 0.5-second reduction in cooling dwell increases annual output by approximately 2.16 million cavities. At KRW 45/bottle contract price, that represents KRW 97M in additional annual revenue per mould set — recoverable from a cooling channel redesign that might cost KRW 5–12M to implement. No other single engineering change in Korean ISBM production generates this return-to-investment ratio.
The hot runner system is the other primary thermal engineering element in Korean ISBM moulds — its interaction with the cooling system is covered in the hot runner systems engineering guide. Cooling channel design must be considered together with hot runner heat input — the hot runner adds heat to the mould that the cooling channels must simultaneously remove, and cooling channel placement near hot runner manifold zones can create thermal interference that degrades both systems.
Heat removal from the blown bottle in an ISBM mould occurs through a series of thermal resistances in sequence: (1) heat conducts from the bottle wall through the PET to the outer bottle surface; (2) heat conducts across the interface between the bottle outer surface and the mould cavity surface (the contact resistance, affected by blow pressure and bottle-mould contact area); (3) heat conducts through the mould steel from the cavity surface to the cooling channel wall; (4) heat transfers from the channel wall surface into the cooling water by forced convection.
The dominant resistance in this chain — the step that limits the overall heat removal rate — determines what engineering change produces the greatest cycle time improvement. For Korean ISBM moulds with standard cooling channel layouts (channels at 15–20mm from cavity surface), the dominant resistance is typically the steel conduction path (step 3) — improving channel proximity to the cavity surface provides the greatest immediate benefit. For moulds with channels already at 8–10mm from the cavity, the dominant resistance shifts to the convective resistance at the channel wall (step 4) — improving flow rate to achieve turbulent flow provides the greatest additional benefit.
The thermal calculation that defines cooling time for a specific Korean ISBM bottle — used to specify the minimum cooling channel density required to achieve a target cycle time — starts with the bottle wall thermal mass (mass × specific heat × temperature drop from blow temperature to ejection temperature) and works backward through the thermal resistance chain to determine the required cooling channel surface area and water flow rate. This calculation is available from Korean Ever-Power’s mould engineering team as a standard service for mould qualification projects.
Channel depth from cavity surface (d): The standard Korean ISBM mould specification targets 8–12mm from the cooling channel centreline to the nearest cavity surface. Below 8mm, the mould steel cross-section becomes mechanically weak (risk of stress cracking from injection pressure cycles); above 12mm, the thermal resistance through steel increases significantly and heat extraction efficiency drops. For PETG K-Beauty moulds where optical clarity requires rapid and uniform cooling, 8–10mm is the preferred range. The quick-reference table at the top of this guide shows the full parameter range by resin type.
Channel diameter: 8–10mm is standard for Korean ISBM blow moulds. Larger channels (12mm) increase flow capacity but reduce the mechanical strength of the mould steel between channel and cavity — a trade-off that is not justified unless flow rate calculations show that 10mm channels cannot achieve the required Reynolds number at the available chiller flow capacity. The channel diameter also affects the minimum pitch achievable — in 718H steel with 10mm channels, the minimum reliable pitch is approximately 20mm (2× diameter), providing a structural wall thickness of 5mm between adjacent channels.
Channel pitch: The distance between adjacent cooling channels (centre-to-centre) determines the uniformity of cooling across the cavity surface. Widely-spaced channels create “hot spots” on the cavity surface midway between channels — these hot spots produce warmer bottle zones that require longer cooling time to solidify. For Korean PET standard production, a pitch of 2–2.5× channel depth (16–25mm for 10mm deep channels) is adequate. For Korean K-Beauty PETG and pharmaceutical production where optical uniformity requires cavity surface temperature variation below ±2°C, pitch should be reduced to 1.8–2.2× depth (14–18mm for 8mm deep channels). The mould design decisions that integrate cooling geometry with the 9 other mould specification factors are in the Korean ISBM mould selection guide.
Korean ISBM mould cooling water temperature is set by the production chiller, typically specified at 8–12°C inlet for PET and PETG standard production. The relationship between water temperature and cycle time in Korean ISBM is approximately linear within the normal operating range: each 10°C reduction in cooling water inlet temperature reduces the minimum cooling dwell by approximately 0.8–1.2 seconds (for a standard 500ml PET bottle at 0.22mm average wall). The practical lower limit for Korean ISBM cooling water is approximately 6°C — below this, condensation forms on the mould external surfaces in Korean summer humidity conditions, creating water ingress risk into the bottle and electrical hazard at the blow station.
Flow rate specification for Korean ISBM cooling circuits must achieve turbulent flow (Reynolds number Re > 4,000; target Re > 10,000 for maximum heat transfer). The Reynolds number for a circular cooling channel is Re = (flow velocity × channel diameter) / kinematic viscosity. For 10mm diameter channels at 10°C water (kinematic viscosity ≈ 0.00131 cm²/s), achieving Re = 10,000 requires a flow velocity of approximately 1.31 m/s, corresponding to a volumetric flow rate of 0.62 L/min per channel. Korean ISBM cooling circuits with 8 channels per cavity set (typical for a 500ml bottle mould body) require approximately 5 L/min total flow at this specification — easily within the capacity of standard Korean industrial chillers, but frequently not achieved in practice because Korean ISBM operators set chiller flow rates by pressure gauge (which does not directly indicate channel flow rate) rather than by flowmeter.
Installing individual channel flow meters (rotameters, KRW 35,000–85,000 per channel) on Korean ISBM cooling circuits is the single most impactful instrumentation investment available to Korean mould shops wanting to verify cooling performance. Without flow meters, cooling circuit optimisation is qualitative — with them, it is engineering. Korean mould maintenance programmes that include quarterly cooling circuit flow measurement (as part of the 5-tier preventive maintenance framework in the Korean ISBM maintenance checklist) identify flow reduction from scale build-up before it translates to increased cycle times.
The blow mould body in Korean 4-station ISBM is a split-cavity structure — two halves that close around the inflated bottle. Cooling channels in the blow mould body run longitudinally (parallel to the bottle axis) for most Korean ISBM mould designs, entering from one end of the cavity and exiting at the other. The advantages of longitudinal channels are simplicity of design and machining, and accessibility for inspection and cleaning. The disadvantage is non-uniform cooling along the bottle height: the cooling water enters cold at the channel inlet zone and exits warm at the outlet, creating a temperature gradient of 2–4°C along the bottle height in standard Korean ISBM production.
For Korean ISBM moulds where cavity temperature uniformity is critical — K-Beauty PETG, premium supplement PETG, pharmaceutical containers — the standard Korean solution to the inlet-outlet temperature gradient is a serpentine (baffled) channel design that doubles back on itself, creating inlet and outlet zones at the same end of the cavity and alternating hot-and-cold channel passes across the cavity height. This serpentine design increases cooling channel circuit length (and hence pressure drop and pumping requirement) but produces cavity temperature uniformity of ±1°C versus ±3–4°C for straight-through longitudinal channels — an improvement that directly correlates with better optical clarity consistency across the full bottle height in PETG production.
For multi-cavity Korean ISBM moulds (6-cavity, 8-cavity), each cavity receives its own independent cooling circuit — parallel circuits, not series. Series connection of multiple cavities (one circuit running through all cavities sequentially) is a common Korean ISBM mould cost-saving approach that creates systematically warmer downstream cavities and hence higher weight variation between cavity positions. Cavity-to-cavity weight variation above CV% 4% in Korean ISBM production frequently traces to series cooling — correctable by retrofitting parallel manifold connections, which typically costs KRW 800K–2M per mould set.
The base zone of the ISBM blow mould — the mould component that forms the bottle base, including the champagne base for CSD or the flat base for non-carbonated bottles — is the most thermally demanding zone in the mould and the most frequently underspecified in Korean ISBM mould designs. The base zone receives the thickest section of the bottle (the gate area at the preform base has the most material per unit area), must cool the highly-stressed biaxially-oriented base structure, and in CSD production must cool the champagne base petaloid geometry through complex geometric transitions that standard cylindrical channel layouts cannot serve efficiently.
The standard Korean ISBM blow mould base plate design uses a single central water channel or two parallel channels running across the base insert behind the champagne base geometry. This design typically achieves only 60–75% of the heat extraction rate that the cavity body channels achieve — creating a temperature differential between bottle body (well-cooled) and bottle base (under-cooled) that requires the cooling dwell to be set by the base solidification time rather than the body solidification time. In practical terms, the base dictates the cooling dwell that the entire bottle waits for — and improving base cooling specifically is the single most effective cycle time intervention in Korean ISBM operations that have already optimised body cooling channel geometry.
The most effective Korean ISBM base cooling improvement is replacing the simple cross-channel with a bubbler or baffle design that creates a small-diameter water jet (typically 4–6mm diameter) directed at the base insert centre — the highest-temperature point. The jet creates high-velocity impingement cooling at exactly the location that needs it most, reducing base zone temperature by 8–15°C compared to a channel-cooled base at equivalent overall flow rate. Base bubbler installation in a Korean ISBM mould typically costs KRW 450K–1.2M per cavity and recovers its cost within 2–4 months through the 0.3–0.8 second cycle reduction it enables. The defects caused by inadequate base cooling — base warpage, base rollout in CSD, gate zone haze — are documented in the Korean ISBM bottle defects field guide.
| Bottle Quality Symptom | Cooling Root Cause | Diagnostic Confirmation | Engineering Correction |
|---|---|---|---|
| Base warpage after ejection | Base zone under-cooled; ejected before solidification complete | IR thermometer on base immediately after ejection — if >45°C, base still soft | Add base bubbler or increase cooling dwell by 0.5s increments |
| Wavy / irregular label panel | Non-uniform cavity cooling across body; hot spots between channels | Mould surface IR scan after steady-state production — reveals hot spot pattern | Reduce channel pitch in body zone; check for blocked channels |
| Cavity-to-cavity weight variation (>CV 4%) | Series cooling circuit — downstream cavities run warmer | Measure cooling water outlet temperature per cavity — downstream cavities will be warmer | Convert to parallel cooling manifold; add dedicated chiller capacity |
| Haze at upper body / shoulder in PETG | Upper cavity inadequate cooling; material stays above Tg too long post-blow | Reduce conditioning temperature 2°C — if haze reduces, cooling not the cause. If haze persists, confirm cooling channel proximity in upper cavity zone | Add upper cavity cooling zone; verify channel depth at shoulder zone |
| Progressive cycle time increase over shift | Scale build-up in channels reducing flow; chiller capacity overloaded in summer | Measure inlet/outlet water temperatures over shift — rising ΔT indicates either flow reduction or heat load increase | Chemical descale treatment; check chiller setpoint vs actual delivery temperature in Korean summer conditions |
Cooling channel scale (calcium carbonate and magnesium deposits from Korean tap water) is the primary long-term degradation mechanism for Korean ISBM mould cooling performance. Korean tap water hardness varies by region — Gyeonggi-do (where most Korean ISBM production is concentrated) typically has moderate hardness of 60–120 ppm CaCO₃, sufficient to create measurable scale deposits within 6–12 months of continuous operation without water treatment. Scale deposits as thin as 0.5mm reduce the heat transfer coefficient of the channel wall by 20–35%, adding 0.4–0.8 seconds to minimum cooling dwell.
Korean ISBM producers should implement two cooling water management practices: water quality control (either softened water at ≤50 ppm hardness fed to the chiller and cooling circuits, or a chemical inhibitor programme with anti-scale and corrosion inhibitor dosed at the chiller tank) and periodic descaling (dilute citric acid or proprietary descaling agent circulated through the cooling channels annually, or semi-annually in hard water areas). The descaling procedure requires isolating the mould cooling circuits from the chiller (to protect chiller internals from acid), connecting a descaling pump and reservoir directly to the mould cooling circuits, and circulating the descaling solution for 2–4 hours at 40°C before flushing with clean water. This annual descaling procedure typically recovers 80–90% of the original cooling performance in channels that have been operating without water treatment.
Scale build-up is preventable but not reversible once it becomes severe — channels blocked beyond 30% of original cross-section require mechanical cleaning (drilling or rodding) that risks damaging channel wall surface finish and reducing the channel’s long-term heat transfer capability. Korean ISBM producers who experience increasing cycle times without changes to process parameters should include cooling circuit flow rate measurement and scale inspection as the first diagnostic step — before assuming the problem is process-related. The broader maintenance programme that integrates cooling circuit management with the full mould maintenance schedule is in the Korean ISBM 5-tier maintenance framework.
Q1 — How do we calculate the minimum chiller capacity required for a Korean ISBM production line?
Chiller capacity is calculated from the heat load: heat load (kW) = (bottle preform weight × specific heat of PET × temperature drop) × (shots per minute × cavities per shot). For a Korean 8-cavity HGY200-V4 running 26g PET preforms at 6 shots/minute: heat load = (0.026kg × 1.25 kJ/kg·K × 200K temperature drop from barrel to ejection) × (6 × 8) = 6.5 kW × 48 = 312 kW. Add 20% for mould body heat absorption and 15% for ambient losses: total chiller requirement approximately 420 kW. Korean industrial chillers are rated in refrigeration tons (1 RT = 3.517 kW); this example requires approximately 120 RT of chiller capacity. Korean ISBM producers who run two or more production lines from a single chiller must verify that total line heat load does not exceed 80% of chiller nameplate capacity — leaving 20% margin for Korean summer ambient temperature conditions.
Q2 — Is conformal cooling viable for Korean ISBM blow moulds?
Conformal cooling — 3D-printed cooling channels that follow the cavity surface contour rather than straight drilled lines — has become commercially viable in Korean ISBM blow moulds for premium applications since 2023. Korean mould shops with metal additive manufacturing capability (primarily in the Incheon and Siheung industrial clusters) can produce conformal cooling inserts in H13 or 718H powder bed fusion at KRW 4–12M premium over conventional drilling. The performance improvement is most significant in geometrically complex base zones and in the shoulder-body transition region where conventional drilling cannot place channels closer than 12–14mm to the cavity surface due to geometric constraints — conformal cooling can reach 6–8mm at these locations, reducing base cooling time by 25–40% for complex champagne base geometries. For standard cylindrical ISBM bottles, the conformal cooling premium is not generally justified — conventional drilling with proper channel proximity achieves near-equivalent performance at far lower tooling cost.
Q3 — What is the correct minimum cooling dwell time after blow for Korean standard PET production?
Minimum cooling dwell is the time required after blow air release for the bottle to cool from its blow temperature (approximately 80–100°C at the bottle outer surface immediately after blow) to below the PET softening point (approximately 70°C for lightly crystallised PET, 65°C for amorphous zones at the gate) at the thickest bottle section — typically the base gate zone. For a standard 500ml Korean PET water bottle at 0.22mm average body wall, this requires approximately 1.5–2.2 seconds at 10°C cooling water with properly designed channels. Korean ISBM operators who reduce cooling dwell below this minimum to chase faster cycle times will observe base deformation on hot Korean summer days (when ambient conditions slow post-ejection cooling) and increasing scrap rates from bottle stacking deformation on the exit conveyor. The correct approach is to engineer the cooling channel system to achieve the target quality at the minimum dwell — not to reduce dwell at the expense of quality.
Q4 — Does mould cooling affect bottle clarity in PETG K-Beauty production?
Directly and measurably. PETG clarity (haze and gloss) is affected by the cooling rate applied after blow: faster cooling (lower water temperature, better channel efficiency) produces lower haze because PETG’s amorphous structure is quenched before any micro-crystallisation can occur. PETG bottles produced with inadequate cooling (warm mould zones due to insufficient channel density or poor flow) show localised haze at the hot zones — typically at the upper body and shoulder region where channel density is often reduced to accommodate the neck finish geometry. Korean K-Beauty brands who specify haze ≤1.5% consistently find that this specification requires both conditioning temperature optimisation (below 88°C) and mould cooling performance verification (cavity surface temperature ≤18°C at steady-state production). Bottles that pass the first-article haze specification but fail after the first hour of production are experiencing a cooling inadequacy — the mould has not yet reached thermal equilibrium at the start of production but progressively warms during the shift as cooling capacity is marginal.
Q5 — How does Korean summer humidity affect ISBM mould cooling performance?
Korean summer conditions (July–August, 85–95% relative humidity, ambient 30–36°C) create two cooling-related challenges. First, the chiller inlet water temperature rises because Korean chillers work harder in high ambient temperatures — actual cooling water delivery may be 2–4°C above the setpoint at chiller nameplate cooling capacity in Korean August conditions, directly reducing mould cooling efficiency. Korean ISBM producers should overspec chillers by 25–30% above calculated heat load specifically to maintain setpoint delivery in summer. Second, condensation forms on mould surfaces where the mould temperature falls below the dew point (typically 24–28°C in Korean summer) — this condensation water can drip into the open cavity between shots, causing irregular bottle surface texture and potential water-borne contamination in food contact production. Korean ISBM producers address this by raising cooling water temperature to 12–15°C (above the dew point) during peak summer months, accepting the slight increase in cooling dwell that this requires.
Q6 — What cooling channel specification should Korean ISBM producers include in their mould purchase orders?
A complete Korean ISBM mould cooling channel specification should include: channel diameter (mm); minimum channel depth from nearest cavity surface (mm); maximum channel pitch (mm); number of independent cooling circuits per cavity; circuit connection type (parallel manifold required — not series); flow rate per circuit at target operating conditions (L/min); maximum inlet-outlet temperature differential at specified flow rate (°C); base cooling type (straight channel, bubbler, baffle — and specification); and mould material thermal conductivity (W/m·K, which indirectly specifies steel grade). When this specification is included in the purchase order, it becomes a contractual requirement that the mould supplier must demonstrate at first-article testing — typically via mould surface temperature mapping under production conditions. Without this specification, the mould supplier’s default cooling design may or may not achieve the cycle time targets Korean producers need.
Cooling Engineering Support
Korean Ever-Power’s mould engineering team evaluates your cooling channel layout, chiller spec, and water flow data — and provides a specific cooling improvement plan with quantified cycle time reduction projections before any engineering work begins.
Related Resources
Application of ISBM · Korean Edible Oil · Food-Grade Packaging 2026 ISBM Korean Edible Oil…
Technical Deep Dive · Production Efficiency · Korean ISBM 2026 ISBM Quick Mould Change: Korean…
Application of ISBM · Korean Sauce & Condiment Packaging · 2026 ISBM Korean Sauce &…
Technical Deep Dive · Blow Station Engineering · Korean ISBM 2026 ISBM Blow Station Engineering:…
Application of ISBM · Korean CSD Beverages · 2026 ISBM Korean CSD Carbonated Drink Bottle…
Application of ISBM · Korean Premium Water · 2026 ISBM Korean Premium Water Bottle Production…