For every plan, the power of ANOVA statistical test was calculated.
4.1. DOE Analysis of the Impact of the SBM Process (Blow Mold Temperature) on the Change of Thickness Profile and Kinetics of Bottle Blowing—NoE: 1
Figure 2 and
Figure 3 show the results of testing the impact of the blow mold temperature in a one-way plan, respectively, on the thickness and coefficients of blow kinetics for selected bottles in accordance with
Table A2 (a) and all 15 bottles in Series “A” (b). The figures also include the results of the analysis of the power of the analyses carried out, the Levene test homogeneity of variance results, and the mean values of the analyzed quantities along with the measurement uncertainty calculated in accordance with the description in the corresponding first part of the paper [
5]. When determining the blow kinetics coefficients, it was noticed that the V mark made on the preform did not change its dimensions or position on the bottle, which was caused by the cooling of the preform gate area with a stretching rod. The remaining markers shifted and deformed, which is graphically shown in
Figure 4.
Figure 2 shows that, regardless of the temperature of the blow mold, the greatest thickness is obtained around the shoulder part of the bottle, and the smallest in the vicinity of the bottle label. The thickness of the bottle near the bottom is greater than for the label area but only slightly, compared to the difference between the thickness around the label and around the shoulder. Most likely this has to do with the shape of the bottle being analyzed and the narrow shape of the arms.
In addition,
Figure 2 shows that the higher is the temperature of the blow mold, the greater is the thickness of the shoulder area, label, and top of the bottom, while it decreases for the bottom of the base. This can be explained by the fact that, in a cold blow mold, the material of a blown bottle is cooled by the air between the surface of the mold and the surface of the blow bottle, while, in a hot blow mold, the material of a blown bottle is heated up even more strongly by the air (enclosed between the surface of the blow mold and the surface of the blown bottle), as a result of which, in the initial stage of blowing, even during the movement of the stretching rod, the material is blown more quickly (in relation to the position of the stretching rod) for a hot mold than for a cold mold and more material remains around the shoulder and label. This is indirectly demonstrated by the influence of the blow mold temperature on the change of the coefficient
for the IV marking, where the marking has moved towards the neck for the hot blow mold, which could have been caused by faster blowing of the bottle around the shoulders and label in the case of the hot blow mold. For Determinations I–III, there is no statistical effect of the blow mold temperature on the change of the coefficients
.
It should be emphasized that the results of the analysis of variance homogeneity for the thickness and blow kinetics coefficients are practically satisfied for all tests. This means that the measurement result was not affected by any uncontrolled factor and at the statistical level it can be clearly determined what was measured.
Figure 3 and
Figure 4 show that, irrespective of the mold temperature, the smallest circumferential enlargement of the markers during blowing occurs at Point I and increases rapidly towards the bottom. However, for Point III, the peripheral magnification of the markers is greater than for the Point IV markers. This is due to the “pear” shape of the bottle. In addition,
Figure 3 shows that the circumferential deformation of the inner markers is greater than the circumferential deformation of the outer markers. This is due to the fact that, during blowing the thickness decreases, thus the relative circumferential displacement of the inner wall is greater than the outer wall of the bottle. It also follows that, in the movements of the material in the bottle wall during blowing, the material close to the inner wall has a greater share than the material close to the outer wall before the preform material reaches the mold. The analysis of the influence of the mold temperature on the change of the axial and circumferential dimensions of the external and internal markings is strongly distorted by the strongly changing shape of the blow mold depending on the axial position of the analyzed mark. Therefore, this analysis is not carried out. In other words, the coefficients
,
,
, and
are not independent of each other for different mold temperatures because they strongly depend on the factor
.
However, it is possible to perform an analysis of the relationship between the shape of the external markings and internal markings, as well as the effect of the blow mold temperature on changing this relationship. For the hot mold, the analysis of the location of the external markings relative to the position of the internal markings shows that, for Point I, the internal markings move towards the bottom relative to the position of the external mark—as around Point I the inner wall of the bottle moves relative to the outer wall of the bottle towards the bottom. This is due to the fact that the outer wall encounters resistance (friction) when it comes into contact with the wall of the blow mold. For Point II, the internal marking does not move relative to the external marking (the internal marking is slightly moved towards the bottom relative to the external marking). For Point III, the outer marking is shifted towards both the bottom and the thread relative to the location of the inner marking, although more towards the bottom than towards the thread. However, for Point IV markings, the outer mark moves towards the bottom relative to the position of the inner mark. To sum up, it can be stated that, in the case of a hot blow mold, for the shoulder of the bottle, the inner wall slips against the outer wall towards the bottom, while for the bottom of the bottle the opposite is true, and the inner wall slips against the outer wall towards the bottle thread. The trend changes around Point III. This is understandable behavior of the bottle wall during blowing. From this gradient of axial displacement in the thickness direction, it follows that, for the shoulder area, the outer wall of the bottle “meets” the blow mold wall in the direction “from the thread to the bottom”, while, for the bottom, the outer wall of the bottle “meets” the blow mold wall in the direction “from the bottom to the thread”.
The behavior of the internal markings relative to the external form is different for a cold blow mold. Thus, for determinations I–IV, the internal designation is shifted towards the thread relative to the external designation and much more strongly for Designation II than Designation I, while, for Designations III and IV, practically no shift occurs (it is not statistically significant). This behavior of the material indicates a rather surprising movement of the material in the wall of the blown bottle. Regardless of the temperature of the blow mold, the inner wall of the bottle was more circumferentially deformed than the outer wall of the blown bottle. Thus, as a result of orienting the macromolecules, it strengthened more strongly as a result of blowing than the outer wall. Thus, during the blow, it is “easier” to move from the outside of the bottle’s shoulder towards the label (and from around the label towards the bottom). However, the difference between a cold and hot mold occurs after the wall of the blown bottle comes into contact with the wall of the blow mold. For a cold blow mold, the bottle material is immediately cooled to below the softening point, preventing further movement of the inner wall relative to the outer. On the other hand, for a hot blow mold, after the outer wall of the bottle comes into contact with the wall of the blow mold, the material of the bottle is not cooled, but the outer wall will encounter resistance (by friction) without moving further, while the material from the inner wall of the bottle is constantly moving as a result of being “pulled” by the material being blown around the label and bottom.
The movement of the internal markings relative to the external ones for Points I–III depending on the temperature of the mold is statistically significantly different. However, the effect of the blow mold temperature on the displacement of the internal markings relative to the external ones for Point IV is statistically insignificant.
However, the power of ANOVA testing is very low for the thickness measurement and blow kinetics. Only for the analysis of the impact of the blow mold temperature on the thickness around the shoulder (Point I) and base (Point V), the test power is acceptable on the basis of the number of bottles specified in
Table A2, while for the part of the label and blow kinetics coefficients the number in the series of bottles specified in
Table A2 is insufficient in terms of statistical test power. Increasing the number of bottles to 15 for all tests only slightly increased the power of the statistical tests for analyzing the effect of the blow mold temperature on the thickness profile and blow kinetics. It follows that, in terms of the test power and thus the likelihood of failure of a second type of error, more bottles are needed in the test series than 15, especially for the analysis of the blow kinetics. It follows also that any analysis that did not show the effect of the blow mold temperature on a dependent variable is most likely erroneous; this effect does occur, but it is not known what effect it is.
4.2. DOE Analysis of the Impact of the SBM Process and Hot Fill Process on the Change of Density, Degree of Crystallinity and Orientation of the Amorphous Phase of the Bottle Material Relative to the Preform Material—NoE: 2–7
Figure 5,
Figure 6 and
Figure 7 show the influence of the blow mold temperature and hot filling method in a one-way test plan on the degree of crystallinity, density, and relaxation of the amorphous phase of the bottle material relative to the preform material, respectively. The figures (and all the figures described below in the paper) also include the results of the analysis of the power of the analyses carried out, the results of the homogeneity of variance (Levene test), and the mean values of the analyzed quantities along with the measurement uncertainty (calculated in accordance with the description in the corresponding first part of the paper [
5]).
Figure 8 summarizes the results shown in
Figure 5,
Figure 6 and
Figure 7.
Figure 5 and
Figure 6 show that the SBM process and the filling process significantly affected both the degree of crystallinity and the density of the bottle’s material relative to the preform material—both values increased. However,
Figure 7 shows that the SBM process and the hot filling process did not always change the relaxation of the amorphous phase of the bottle material relative to the preform material. For the SBM process with the hot mold and without the hot filling process (Hot-A) and the SBM process with the hot mold and annealing in the bath after hot filling (Hot-C), there was no statistically significant change in the degree of relaxation of the amorphous phase, and even, for the SBM process with the hot mold and free annealing after a hot filling (Hot-B), the change in the degree of relaxation of the amorphous phase of the bottle material relative to the preform material is significantly less than for the Cold-mold SBM process. However, it should be very strongly noted that the test power for the Hot-A, Hot-B, and Hot-C cases is close to zero, thus we make a practically certain Type II error in assuming the null hypothesis is true when it is incorrect (in other words, the conclusion that for the Hot-A and Hot-C series the SBM process had no effect on the degree of relaxation of the amorphous phase of the bottle’s material relative to the preform material is with more than 90% probability incorrect). It is also worth noting that the homogeneity of variance between the measurements of the degree of crystallinity of the preform material and the bottle material for Hot-A is not maintained, while it is already preserved for all the other series. Perhaps for the Hot-A series there was some uncontrolled factor when testing the degree of crystallinity of the bottle (
Figure 7 shows that only for this series the amorphous phase relaxation was lower for the hot mold than for the cold one, but this effect was not statistically significant with a 5% assumption, making an error of the first type). In addition, the lack of homogeneity of variance occurs when testing the density for the Cold-B and Cold-C series. However, it is not known what could be the reason for this, although, due to many factors affecting the properties of the bottle, the bottle is characterized by very heterogeneous microstructure properties, even in the area of the cut sample with dimensions 1 cm × 1 cm. Due to the very strong heterogeneity, the number of repetitions of the measurement of the bottle’s microstructure characteristics should be increased.
The increase in the degree of crystallinity and density of the bottle material relative to the preform material after the SBM process is understandable and obvious (as a result of heating the preforms in the heating oven and subsequent rapid deformation, the material crystallized and thus increased in density). It is interesting, however, that, in every case of a statistically significant change in the degree of relaxation of the amorphous phase, the degree of relaxation of the amorphous phase also increased after the SBM process and hot filling—i.e., the density of the amorphous phase of the bottle’s material is less than the density of the amorphous phase of the preform.
The above phenomenon is very puzzling, because it would suggest a decrease in the nematic and smectic mesophases of the amorphous phase in the bottle material relative to the preform material, which is not confirmed anywhere in the literature. However, another phenomenon can be found in the literature that may explain this specific behavior of PET during the SBM process. This is the phenomenon of microcavitation [
7] at the border of the crystalline phase and the amorphous phase during rapid deformation of this material—increasing the free volume of the material in the area of the amorphous phase at the border with the crystalline phase, as a result of which the density of the non-crystalline phase in the volume of the sample decreases, which is ideally shown in Figure 10. Microcavitation processes occur, but the PET chains do not crack (the breaking strength of covalent bonds in a carbon-based chain is 60–100 GPa, which is a gigantic value compared to the strength limit of ordinary steel, which is 0.3–0.6 GPa). It must be strongly emphasized that, if the free volume statistically significantly changes during the SBM process, correlating the density of the non-crystalline phase with the degree of relaxation of the amorphous phase loses any sense. The free volume of the preform and bottle should be measured, e.g., by positron annihilation testing.
However, in the literature it was found that a decrease in the density of PET material relative to the density of the amorphous phase may occur, not as a result of stretching the material, but as a result of immersion of the unstretched PET for 30 min in acetaldehyde. The authors of [
8] showed that the immersion of unstretched PET for 30 min in acetaldehyde causes:
a reduction of the amount of trans conformation of two carbonyl groups adjacent to the benzene ring;
an increase of the amount of ordered lamellar crystals (increasing the trans conformation of the glycol group);
an increase of the amount of perpendicular arrangement of the carbonyl group and benzene ring relative to each other; and
a decrease in density perpendicular to the plane (100).
The above statements are probably connected with a reduction in the structural packing of PET chains. A similar phenomenon may occur in the samples tested because it is not pure PET. The compound, which is additionally found in the samples, can cause similar changes in conformation and thinning of the system, and thus a decrease in the density of the material.
The reduction in the density of the material relative to the density of the non-oriented amorphous phase can also be explained in another way. During stretching of the initially crystalline material, the crystallinity of the material may decrease in some areas due to the disturbed structure while in other places the crystallinity may increase. In addition, the crystal structures during the deformation of the sample can rotate and tear, as illustrated in
Figure 9 [
9]. Individual phases of disruption of fibrillar structures shown in
Figure 9 according to the authors of [
9] are as follows: (a) stretching of inter-lamellar amorphous areas; (b) deformation of lamellas as a result of stretching, which results in recrystallization of crystalline parts of fibrils; (c) disintegration of lamellas as a result of high tangential forces from related macromolecules (covalent forces in the main chain are stronger than van der Waals forces between macromolecules in lamellar structures, which is why crystal structures are broken, but not the chains in the amorphous region); and (d) formation of microscopic crystal structures in the form of fibers. What is more, when the local oriented amorphous area crystallizes (increases the order), the number of chains decreases in the surrounding area and thus the density of the surroundings (because some of the chains from this area have been introduced into the crystallizing area), which increases the disorder of the chains around the crystalline area (colloquially speaking, disorder decreases, i.e., the entropy of the environment increases). This phenomenon has been observed by several researchers (e.g., [
10]). The authors of [
11] claimed that, in the case of strain-induced crystallization caused by deformation of PET material, the crystallization nuclei with a triclinic PET structure strongly interact with the surrounding deformed chain network, which means that the relaxation processes of these chains also affect the orientation of the crystallization nuclei (and the further orientation of the crystalline phase).
Figure 10 shows hypothetical considerations of the effect of crystallite rotation on the behavior of the free volume at the boundary of crystallites with the amorphous phase. In
Figure 10, the individual markings mean: (a) stretching of inter-lamellar amorphous regions; (b) crystallization of the oriented amorphous phase to the form of crystallite and an increase in the free volume in the area of the boundary of the crystalline phase with the amorphous on the rotation of crystallites as a result of deformation (cavitations in the volume of amorphous phase of the material); (1 and 3) rotation of crystallites; (2) crystallization of the oriented amorphous phase as a result of deformation (strain- induced crystallization); (4) distance between adjacent chains coming out of the crystallite on the border of the crystalline phase with the amorphous phase before the stretching process; (5) distance between adjacent crystallites in a direction to the final direction of the boundary of the crystalline phase with the amorphous phase (i.e., in the direction of the boundary of the crystalline phase with the amorphous phase after the rotation of the crystallite as a result of stretching); and (6)distance between adjacent chains going out of crystallite on the border of the crystalline phase with the amorphous phase after the stretching process. As the hypothetical considerations show, as a result of the crystallite rotation in the amorphous phase, the distance increases between adjacent chains coming out of the crystallite at the border of the crystalline phase with the amorphous, and thus the free volume increases, which results in a decrease in the density of the oriented amorphous phase relative to the non-oriented.
What is more, it is worth emphasizing that numerical simulations of rubber state models with nematic microstructure show that, during uniaxial deformation of such material, there is a simultaneous transverse contraction of the sample that is smaller than the contraction of the microstructure induced by the orientation of the particles in the nematic order [
12]. This may be due to the fact that microcavity effects occur during the deformation of the material and that these are associated with the orientation of the microstructure. The intensification of the cavitation process in the purified polypropylene samples can be explained by changes in the amorphous phase, i.e., the changes in free volume arising from the elimination of low fractions and soluble additives. An increase in free volume was probed with positron annihilation lifetime spectroscopy. The intense formation of cavitation pores in purified polypropylene proves that the initiation of cavitation in polypropylene has a homogeneous nature (the homogeneous nucleation of cavitation), as shown by [
7]. These authors predict similar behavior in other crystalline cavitating polymers and associate this with the extraction of additives and the low molecular weight fraction.
4.3. DOE Analysis of the Influence of Blow Mold Temperature and Hot Fill Method on Pressure Resistance and Thermal Stability of the Bottle in a Single-Factor Plan—NoE: 8–16
Figure 11 and
Figure 12 show the results of testing the impact of the blow mold temperature in a single-factor plan on the pressure resistance and thermal shrinkage, respectively.
Figure 11 and
Figure 12 also show the results of the blow mold effect on thickness at Point III, i.e., where the cracking began during the pressure resistance tests.
Comparing the pressure resistance and thermal stability (thermal shrinkage) of a bottle made in a cold and hot blow mold for the case before the hot fill process (just after production) and after the hot fill process (after the free annealing or bath annealing), it follows that:
Both without a hot filling and after a hot filling, the pressure resistance always decreases for a hot blow mold compared to a cold blow mold.
A hot blow mold strongly reduces bottle shrinkage (increased thermal stability) relative to a cold blow mold.
Figure 13 and
Figure 14 show the results of the study on the impact of the hot filling method in a single-factor plan on the pressure resistance and thermal shrinkage of the bottle material, respectively.
Comparing the pressure resistance and thermal stability (thermal shrinkage) of the bottle material before the hot fill process (just after production) and after the hot fill process (after the free annealing and bath annealing process) separately for cold and hot blow molds, it results that:
The method of annealing after hot filling did not have a statistically significant effect on the change in pressure resistance, regardless of the temperature of the blow mold.
The method of annealing after a hot filling (free or in a bath) has a statistically significant effect on the thermal shrinkage, regardless of the blow mold (in both cases, the shrinkage after the bath annealing is much greater than the shrinkage after free annealing). The thermal shrinkage of the bottle annealed in the bath is greater than the thermal shrinkage of the free-annealed bottle, and the thermal shrinkage also increases more rapidly for a cold blow mold than for a hot blow mold. In addition, the power of the tests is very large.
Surprising results were obtained for pressure resistance. For the cold blow mold, the hot fill process and annealing process (free or in bath) during the hot fill process do not have a statistically significant effect on the pressure resistance. Only in the case of a hot blow mold, bath annealing of the bottle in a hot fill process (Series “C”) increases the pressure resistance compared to a bottle without the hot fill (Series “A”). However, it should be emphasized that the ANOVA analysis result when comparing Series “A” and “C” for a cold blow mold has a practically 100% probability of making a Type II error. Thus, most likely, also for a cold blow mold, bath annealing of the bottle increases the pressure resistance in a statistically significant way compared to a bottle without a hot fill (which results from the analysis of the arithmetic mean of the measurements). It follows that the pressure resistance increases after bath annealing in a hot fill process (compared to Series “A”) more strongly for a hot blow mold than for a cold blow mold, which is inversely correlated with the increase in thermal shrinkage. Thus, the change in pressure resistance can also be influenced by the change of size of the bottle (the greater is the shrinkage of the bottle and thus the smaller is the diameter of the bottle, the greater is the pressure resistance of the bottle).
It should be very strongly noted that, after the annealing process, the bottle decreases in volume due to shrinkage. The analysis of pressure resistance shows that the cracking always starts around the bottle label, i.e., around the cylindrical shape. The smaller is the cylinder, the greater is the pressure it can withstand before bursting and so annealing the bottle can increase the pressure resistance due to the bottle contraction that occurs. If the shape of the label area can be simplified to the shape of an ideal cylinder, with a much smaller wall thickness of the diameter of a given cylinder, then, in the label part of the bottle wall, there would occur the so-called membrane stress state. For this case, in an ideal cylindrical tank, the peripheral and longitudinal stresses are calculated by Formulas (1) and (2) respectively (these stresses are also the main stresses). Then, based on the Huber‒Mises‒Hencky hypothesis for the plane stress state, the reduced stress for known principal stresses can be calculated using Formula (3).
where
is the peripheral stresses in the wall of an ideal cylinder assuming a membrane state of stress;
is the longitudinal stresses in the wall of an ideal cylinder assuming a membrane state of stress;
is the reduced stress based on the Huber‒Mises‒Hencky hypothesis for a plane state of stress;
is the pressure of water enclosed inside the bottle;
is the radius of an ideal cylinder that approximates the shape of the bottle label area, which is pressure-dependent and increases as the pressure increases; and
is the wall thickness of the ring with the average radius of an ideal cylinder, which approximates the shape of the bottle label area, depends on the pressure, and decreases with increasing pressure.
Analysis of Formula (3) shows that the stress generated in the bottle wall material increases as a power function as the pressure of water enclosed in the bottle increases. The exponent is greater than one, because the pressure is also included as a function of the bottle radius (this radius increases with increasing pressure) and as a function of thickness (the thickness decreases with increasing pressure). In other words, the more the volume of the bottle increases (including the radius) during the pressure increase, the more the stress in the bottle wall increases, reaching the value of critical stress at which the bottle wall breaks. Thus, the value of the bursting pressure of the bottle is not an explicit measure correlating the phase structure of the bottle with the mechanical strength of the bottle material (which is determined by the “critical stress” at which the material decoheres, and this critical stress is due to the phase structure of the bottle), because pressure resistance is also affected by the geometry of the bottle wall (its diameter and thickness) and the rigidity of the bottle material, which is also affected by the phase structure. The greater is the rigidity of the bottle material (which is affected by the phase structure of the bottle), the smaller is the volume increase of the bottle as the pressure increases and therefore the smaller is the pressure increase in the bottle wall, i.e., the higher is the pressure of the water enclosed in the bottle for the wall pressure to reach the critical stress value at which the material breaks. It should be added that, for greater crystallinity, the material is more rigid, thus it decreases its volume less as the pressure increases.
From the above analysis, it follows that the annealing process itself influenced the pressure resistance, but whether the annealing was free or in the bath did not have a statistically significant effect on the pressure resistance. On the other hand, annealing in the bath caused more shrinkage, which resulted in a smaller bottle diameter than free annealing, but the pressure resistance was comparable. This can be explained by the fact that, in annealing in the bath, the oriented amorphous phase had to disappear much more than in free annealing, which reduced the maximum stress (critical stress) that the bottle wall could withstand. In other words, reducing the diameter of the bottle due to shrinkage after the annealing process in the bath, which should increase the pressure resistance, was compensated by the loss of orientation of the amorphous phase (as a result of which, the maximum stress that the bottle wall could withstand was reduced). However, to confirm this explanation, more tests need to be carried out, especially regarding the microstructure examination of the material. In summary, because of the contraction occurring, there is no clear correlation between the amount of oriented amorphous phase and the pressure resistance. The analysis of the literature shows that, with the reduction of the oriented amorphous phase, the mechanical strength of the material decreases [
3,
4], but, according to Formula (3), with the decrease in volume (due to shrinkage), the mechanical strength increases. To determine such correlations, it would be necessary to study the relationship between the degree of orientation of the amorphous phase and the pressure resistance with the elimination of shrinkage. Thus, the analysis of the tests shows that it would be necessary to carry out pressure tests with a changed degree of orientation of the amorphous phase at a constant volume and at a changed volume, but with a constant degree of orientation of the amorphous phase.
4.4. DOE Analysis of the Influence of the Blow Mold Temperature and Hot Fill Method on Pressure Resistance and Thermal Stability of the Bottle in a Two-Factor Plan—NoE: 17–28
Figure 15,
Figure 16 and
Figure 17 show the results of testing the impact of the blow mold temperature and hot filling method in a 2x2 plan on the pressure resistance and thermal shrinkage of the bottle material for hot filling Methods “A” and “B”, “A” and “C”, and “B” and “C”, respectively. The figures also show the results of the power analysis of the conducted analyses. For comparison, the figures also depict the effect of the blow mold temperature on the change in bottle thickness around Point III-2 of thickness measurement, i.e., around the start of bottle cracking during a pressure resistance test.
Figure 15,
Figure 16 and
Figure 17 show that the analysis of the 2x2 experiments (two-factor bivalent ANOVA) gives comparable results to those from the analysis of the 1x2 experiments (one-factor bivalent ANOVA—
Figure 11,
Figure 12,
Figure 13 and
Figure 14), although from the 2x2 plan it is more difficult to obtain statistically significant relationships between independent variables and a dependent variable. This is due to the fact that, in the 2x2 plan, it is not the arithmetic means of each series that are analyzed, but the arithmetic means of two series for each factor. It follows that the analysis of the 2x2 experiments is less sensitive to differences but allows easier interpretation of results as to the main effects as well as the determination and analysis of cross-effects between factors, which cannot be done for a single-factor plan. One-way plans can only be compared with the main effects of multi-factor plans.
Figure 15,
Figure 16 and
Figure 17 show that, regardless of whether a hot fill was not made or a hot fill was made and annealed, increasing the temperature of the blow mold strongly reduced the pressure resistance. Regardless of whether the mold was hot or cold, the annealing process after hot filling did not affect the pressure resistance. Increasing the temperature of the blow mold strongly reduced the thermal shrinkage of the bottle (increased thermal stability), while annealing in the bath resulted in a stronger thermal shrinkage. It follows that the hydrostatic pressure from the water stored in the bottle during free annealing statistically significantly counteracted the reduction in volume (shrinkage) during annealing. This effect could also be affected by the environment (air temperature) during free annealing, as a result of which the temperature of the bottle wall was cooler on the outer surface, which also counteracted the bottle’s shrinkage. In other words, to test the response of a bottle material to the process of annealing in hot water, this process should be tested by bath annealing.
Compared to the lack of annealing, bath annealing increased the pressure resistance of the bottle, but this may be due to a reduction in the diameter of the bottle and not a change in microstructure, as stated above. Further experimental studies are needed on representative samples cut from the surface of the bottles to eliminate the effect of changing the shape of the bottle during annealing by hot filling.
Figure 15 of the analysis plan of the study of the impact of the blow mold temperature and hot filling (lack of hot fill, Series “A”, as well as free annealing during hot fill, Series “B”) shows that there are no effects of interaction between the temperature of the blow mold and the hot fill on the change in pressure resistance.
Figure 16 of the analysis plan of the study of the impact of the blow mold temperature and hot fill (lack of hot fill, Series “A”, as well as bath annealing during hot fill, Series “C”) shows that there are interaction effects between the temperature of the blow mold and the hot fill on the pressure resistance of the bottle. It follows that increasing the temperature of the blow mold reduces the effect of bath annealing, in comparison with the lack of annealing, on the pressure resistance (and vice versa, i.e., bath annealing instead of a lack of annealing reduces the effect of increasing the blow mold temperature on the pressure resistance).
Figure 17 of the analysis plan of the study of the impact of the blow mold temperature and the annealing method during hot filling (Series “B” and “C”) shows that there are effects of the interaction between the temperature of the blow mold and the method of annealing during hot filling on the thermal shrinkage of the bottle. It follows that increasing the temperature of the blow mold reduces the effect of annealing in the bath relative to free annealing during hot filling on the thermal shrinkage of the bottle (and vice versa, i.e., annealing in the bath relative to free annealing reduces the effect of increasing the temperature of the blow mold on the thermal shrinkage of the bottle).
The problem of the occurrence of a high probability of errors of the second type (low power of statistical tests) should also be emphasized. Thus, from the results in
Figure 15,
Figure 16 and
Figure 17, it appears that there is a very high probability of adopting the null hypothesis that independent variables do not affect dependent variables when it is statistically significant for analysis:
the influence of the blow mold temperature on the bottle pressure resistance regardless of whether hot fill has occurred (Series “A”) or free annealing during hot filling has occurred (Series “B”); and
the impact of the interaction between the temperature of the blow mold and the method of annealing during hot filling (free or in a bath) on the pressure resistance of the bottle.
Most likely, for the interaction effect, there is a statistically significant effect of independent variables on dependent variables, although to confirm the assumptions it would be necessary to repeat the test with a larger number of bottles in the measurement series.