Dictionary Definition
lubricant n : a substance capable of reducing
friction by making surfaces smooth or slippery [syn: lubricator, lubricating
substance]
User Contributed Dictionary
Related terms
Translations
substance used to reduce friction
- Basque: labaingarri
- Czech: mazivo
- Finnish: voiteluaine, liukastin
- French: lubrifiant
- German: Schmiere , Gleitmittel , Schmiermittel
- Greek: λιπαντικό
- Italian: lubrificante
- Portuguese: lubrificante
- Romanian: lubrifiant
- Spanish: lubrificante
Extensive Definition
A lubricant (sometimes referred to "Lube") is a
substance (often a liquid) introduced between two moving surfaces
to reduce the friction
and wear between them. A
lubricant provides a protective film which allows for two touching
surfaces to be separated and "smoothed," thus lessening the
friction between them. Lubricants chemically interact with all
surfaces so that contact only occurs with the smooth and free
lubricant. By this process, abrasive particles are dissolved into
the lubricant, thus making them also very good solvents and
cleaners. Petroleum-based lubricants like Vaseline tend to
dissolve petroleum products such as rubber and plastic, while
water-based lubricants tend to dissolve polar chemicals (like water
and dirt); hence the additives. The lubricant must be replaced when
it has dissolved to saturation, because the inability to dissolve
additional abrasive debris allows abrasive particles to scrape
against or become lodged in the working surfaces, thus introducing
a margin for physical contact between them. Lubricants which
dissolve working surfaces (such as Vaseline with rubber) defeat
their purpose by corroding the smooth surfaces by their own
dissolving power, thus compromising structural integrity, surface
smoothness, and system-wide contamination. It can also help remove
gum from your hair.
One of the single largest applications for
lubricants, in the form of motor oil, is
to protect the internal
combustion engines in motor vehicles and powered
equipment.
Typically lubricants contain 90% base oil (most
often petroleum
fractions, called mineral oils)
and less than 10% additives. Vegetable
oils or synthetic liquids such as hydrogenated polyolefins, esters, silicone, fluorocarbons and many
others are sometimes used as base oils. Additives deliver reduced
friction and wear, increased viscosity, improved viscosity
index, resistance to corrosion and oxidation, aging or
contamination, etc.
Lubricants such as 2-cycle oil
are also added to some fuels. Sulfur impurities in
fuels also provide some lubrication properties, which has to be
taken in account when switching to a low-sulfur diesel; biodiesel is a popular diesel
fuel additive providing additional lubricity.
Non-liquid lubricants include grease,
powders (dry graphite,
PTFE,
Molybdenum
disulfide, tungsten
disulfide, etc.), teflon tape used in plumbing, air cushion and
others. Dry
lubricants such as graphite, molybdenum disulfide and tungsten
disulfide also offer lubrication at temperatures (up to 350 °C)
higher than liquid and oil-based lubricants are able to operate.
Limited interest has been shown in low friction properties of
compacted oxide glaze layers formed at several hundred degrees
Celsius in metallic sliding systems, however, practical use is
still many years away due to their physically unstable
nature.
Another approach to reducing friction and wear is
to use bearings such as ball
bearings, roller
bearings or air
bearings, which in turn require internal lubrication
themselves, or to use sound, in the case of acoustic
lubrication.
In addition to automotive and industrial
applications, lubricants are used for many other purposes,
including as a personal
lubricant, bio-medical applications (e.g.
lubricants for artificial
joints) and others.
Purpose
Lubricants perform the following key functions.- Keep moving parts apart
- Reduce friction
- Transfer heat
- Carry away contaminants & debris
- Transmit power
- Protect against wear
- Prevent corrosion
- Stop the risk of smoke and fire of objects
Keep moving parts apart
Lubricants are typically used to separate moving parts in a system. This has the benefit of reducing friction and surface fatigue together with reduced heat generation, operating noise and vibrations. Lubricants achieve this by several ways. The most common is by forming a physical barrier i.e. a thin layer of lubricant separates the moving parts. This is termed hydrodynamic lubrication. In cases of high surface pressures or temperatures the fluid film is much thinner and some of the forces are transmitted between the surfaces through the lubricant. This is termed elasto-hydrodynamic lubrication.Reduce friction
Typically the lubricant-to-surface friction is much less than
surface-to-surface friction in a system without any lubrication.
Thus use of a lubricant reduces the overall system friction.
Reduced friction has the benefit of reducing heat generation and
reduced formation of wear particles as well as improved efficiency.
Lubricants may contain additives known as friction modifiers that
chemically bind to metal surfaces to reduce surface friction even
when there is insufficient bulk lubricant present for hydrodynamic
lubrication, e.g. protecting the valve train in a car engine at
startup.
Transfer heat
Both gas and liquid lubricants can transfer heat.
However, liquid lubricants are much more effective on account of
their high specific heat
capacity. Typically the liquid lubricant is constantly
circulated to and from a cooler part of the system, although
lubricants may be used to warm as well as to cool when a regulated
temperature is required. This circulating flow also determines the
amount of heat that is carried away in any given unit of time. High
flow systems can carry away a lot of heat and have the additional
benefit of reducing the thermal stress on the lubricant. Thus lower
cost liquid lubricants may be used. The primary drawback is that
high flows typically require larger sumps and bigger cooling units.
A secondary drawback is that a high flow system that relies on the
flow rate to protect the lubricant from thermal stress is
susceptible to catastrophic failure during sudden system shut
downs. An automotive oil-cooled turbocharger is a typical
example. Turbochargers get red hot during operation and the oil
that is cooling them only survives as its residence time in the
system is very short i.e. high flow rate. If the system is shut
down suddenly (pulling into a service area after a high speed drive
and stopping the engine) the oil that is in the turbo charger
immediately oxidizes and will clog the oil ways with deposits. Over
time these deposits can completely block the oil ways, reducing the
cooling with the result that the turbo charger experiences total
failure typically with seized bearings.
Non-flowing lubricants such as greases & pastes are not
effective at heat transfer although they do contribute by reducing
the generation of heat in the first place.
Carry away contaminants and debris
Lubricant circulation systems have the benefit of
carrying away internally generated debris and external contaminants
that get introduced into the system to a filter where they can be
removed. Lubricants for machines that regularly generate debris or
contaminants such as automotive engines typically contain detergent
and dispersant additives to assist in debris and contaminant
transport to the filter and removal. Over time the filter will get
clogged and require cleaning or replacement, hence the
recommendation to change a car's oil filter at the same time as
changing the oil. In closed systems such as gear boxes the filter
may be supplemented by a magnet to attract any iron fines that get
created.
It is apparent that in a circulatory system the
oil will only be as clean as the filter can make it, thus it is
unfortunate that there are no industry standards by which consumers
can readily assess the filtering ability of various automotive
filters. Poor filtration significantly reduces the life of the
machine (engine) as well as making the system inefficient.
Transmit power
Pascal's law
is at the heart of hydrostatic power transmission. Hydraulic fluids
comprise a large portion of all lubricants produced in the
world.
Protect against wear
Lubricants prevent wear by keeping the moving
parts apart. Lubricants may also contain anti-wear or extreme
pressure additives to boost their performance against wear and
fatigue.
Prevent corrosion
Quality lubricants are typically formulated with
additives that form chemical bonds with surfaces to prevent
corrosion and rust.
History
Romans used rags dipped in animal fat to lubricate wagon wheels; however the science of lubrication (tribology) really only took off with the industrial revolution in the nineteenth century.General composition
Lubricants are generally composed of a majority of base oil and a minority of additives to impart desirable characteristics.Liquid lubricants
Liquid lubricants may be characterized in many
different ways. One of the most common ways is by the type of base
oil used. Following are the most common types.
- Lanolin (wool grease, natural water repellant)
- Water
- Mineral oils
- Vegetable (natural oil)
- Synthetic oils
- Others
Note that although generally lubricants are based
on one type of base oil or another it is quite possible to use
mixtures of the base oils to meet performance requirements.
Lanolin
A natural water repellent, lanolin is derived
from wool grease and is an alternative to the more common
petro-chemical based lubricants (such as WD-40). This lubricants
are also corrosion inhibitors, protecting against rust, salt and
acids.
Water
Water can be used on its own or as a major
component in combination with one of the other base oils.
Mineral oil
This term is used to encompass lubricating base
oil derived from crude oil.
API designates several types of lubricant base oil identified
http://www.api.org/certifications/engineoil/pubs/index.cfm
as:
- Group I - Saturates 0.03% and viscosity index >= 80 to <120
- Group II – Saturates >= 90% and sulfur = 80 to <120
- Group III – Saturates >= 90% sulfur = 120
- Group IV – Polyalphaolefins (PAO)
- Group V – All others not included above
-
- Groups III, IV and V are now described as synthetic lubricants, with group III frequently described as synthesised hydrocarbons, or SHCs.
The lubricant industry commonly extends this
group terminology to include:
- Group I+ with a Viscosity Index of 103 - 108
- Group II+ with a Viscosity Index of 113 - 119
- Group III+ with a Viscosity Index of >= 140
Can also be classified into three categories
depending on the prevailing compositions: - Paraffinic - Naphthenic
- Aromatic
Vegetable (natural) oils
These are primarily triglyceride esters derived
from plants and animals. For lubricant base oil use the vegetable
derived materials are preferred. Common ones include high oleic
canola
oil, palm oil,
sunflower
seed oil and rapeseed oil
from vegetable and Tall oil from animal sources. Many vegetable
oils are often hydrolyzed to yield the acids which are subsequently
combined selectively to form specialist synthetic esters.
Synthetic oils
- Polyalpha-olefin (PAO)
- Synthetic esters
- Polyalkylene glycols (PAG)
- Phosphate esters
- Alkylated naphthalenes (AN)
- Silicate esters
- Ionic fluids
Note: Group III base stocks may be designated as
synthetic oil.
Solid lubricants
Teflon or PTFE
Teflon
or PTFE is typically used as a coating layer on, for example,
cooking utensils to provide a non-stick surface.
Mineral
Graphite,
hexagonal Boron
nitride (http://www.advceramics.com/geac/downloads/documents/81503.pdf),
Molybdenum
disulfide and Tungsten
disulfide are examples of materials that can be used as
solid
lubricants often to very high temperature. The use of such
materials are still restricted by their poor resistance to
oxidation (for example, molybdenum disulfide can only be used up to
350C in air, but 1100 in reducing environments).
Other relevant phenomena
'Glaze' formation (high temperature wear)
A further phenomenon that has undergone
investigation in relation to high temperature wear prevention and
lubrication, is that of 'glaze'
formation (http://mysite.wanadoo-members.co.uk/high_temp_wear/mythesis.html).
This is the generation of a compacted oxide layer which sinters
together to form a crystalline 'glaze' (not the amorphous layer
seen in pottery) generally at high temperatures, from metallic
surfaces sliding against each other (or a metallic surface against
a ceramic surface). Due to the elimination of metallic contact and
adhesion by the generation of oxide, friction and wear is reduced.
Effectively, such a surface is self-lubricating.
As the 'glaze' is already an oxide, it can
survive to very high temperatures in air or oxidising environments.
However, it is disadvantaged by it being necessary for the base
metal (or ceramic) having to undergo some wear first to generate
sufficient oxide debris.
Additives
A large number of additives are used to impart performance characteristics to the lubricants. The main families of additives are:- Antioxidants
- Detergents
- Anti-wear
- Metal deactivators
- Corrosion inhibitors, Rust inhibitors
- Friction modifiers
- Extreme Pressure
- Anti-foaming agents
- Viscosity index improvers
- Demulsifying/Emulsifying
- Stickiness improver, provide adhesive property towards tool surface (in metalworking)
- Complexing agent (in case of greases)
Note that many of the basic chemical compounds
used as detergents (example: calcium sulfonate) serve the purpose
of the first seven items in the list as well. Usually it is not
economically or technically feasible to use a single do-it-all
additive compound. Oils for hypoid gear lubrication will
contain high content of EP additives. Grease lubricants may contain
large amount of solid particle friction modifiers, such as
graphite, molybden sulfide, etc.
Application by fluid types
- Automotive
- Engine
oils
- Petrol (Gasoline) engine oils
- Diesel engine oils
- Automatic transmission fluid
- Gearbox fluids
- Brake fluids
- Hydraulic fluids
- Engine
oils
- Tractor (one lubricant for all systems)
- Other motors
- Industrial
- Hydraulic oils
- Air compressor oils
- Gas Compressor oils
- Gear oils
- Bearing and circulating system oils
- Refrigerator compressor oils
- Steam and gas turbine oils
- Aviation
- Gas turbine engine oils
- Piston engine oils
- Marine
- Crosshead cylinder oils
- Crosshead Crankcase oils
- Trunk piston engine oils
- Stern tube lubricants
Marketing
The global lubricant market is generally
competitive with numerous manufacturers and marketers. Overall the
western market may be considered mature with a flat to declining
overall volumes while there is strong growth in the emerging
economies. The lubricant marketers generally--- pursue one or more
of the following strategies when pursuing business.
- Specification:
The lubricant is said to meet a certain
specification. In the consumer market, this is often supported by a
logo, symbol or words that inform the consumer that the lubricant
marketer has obtained independent verification of conformance to
the specification. Examples of these include the API’s donut logo
or the NSF tick
mark. The most widely perceived is SAE viscosity specification,
like SAE
10W-40. Lubricity specifications are institute and manufacturer
based. In the U.S. institute: API S for petrol engines, API C for
diesel engines. For 2007 the current specs are API SM and API CJ.
Higher second letter marks better oil properties, like lower engine
wear supported by tests. In EU the ACEA specifications
are used. There are classes A,B,C,E with number following the
letter. Japan introduced the JASO specification for
motorbike engines. In the industrial market place the specification
may take the form of a legal contract to supply a conforming fluid
or purchasers may choose to buy on the basis of a manufacturers own
published specification.
- Original equipment manufacturer (OEM) approval:
Specifications often denote a minimum acceptable
performance levels. Thus many equipment manufacturers add on their
own particular requirements or tighten the tolerance on a general
specification to meet their particular needs (or doing a different
set of tests or using different/own testbed engine). This gives the
lubricant marketer an avenue to differentiate their product by
designing it to meet an OEM specification. Often, the OEM carries
out extensive testing and maintains an active list of approved
products. This is a powerful marketing tool in the lubricant
marketplace. Text on the back of the motor oil label usually has a
list of conformity to some OEM specifications, such as MB, MAN,
Volvo, Cummins, VW, BMW or others. Manufactures may have vastly
different specifications for the range of engines they make; one
may not be completely suitable for some other.
- Performance:
The lubricant marketer claims benefits for the
customer based on the superior performance of the lubricant. Such
marketing is supported by glamorous advertising, sponsorships of
typically sporting events and endorsements. Unfortunately broad
performance claims are common in the consumer marketplace, which
are difficult or impossible for a typical consumer to verify. In
the B2B market place the marketer is normally expected to show data
that supports the claims, hence reducing the use of broad claims.
Increasing performance, reducing wear and fuel consumption is also
aim of the later API, ACEA and car manufacturer oil specifications,
so lubricant marketers can back their claims by doing extensive
(and expensive) testing.
- Longevity:
The marketer claims that their lubricant
maintains its performance over a longer period of time. For example
in the consumer market, a typical motor oil change interval is
around the 3000-6000 miles (7500-15000 km). The lubricant marketer
may offer a lubricant that lasts for 12000 (30000km) miles or more
to convince a user to pay a premium. Typically, the consumer would
need to check or balance the longer life and any warranties offered
by the lubricant manufacturer with the possible loss of equipment
manufacturer warranties by not following its schedule. Many car and
engine manufacturers support extended drain intervals, but request
extended drain interval certified oil used in that case; and
sometimes a special oil filter. Example: In older Mercedes-Benz
engines and in truck engines one can use engine oil MB 228.1 for
basic drain interval. Engine oils conforming with higher
specification MB 228.3 may be used twice as long, oil of MB 228.5
specification 3x longer. Note that the oil drain interval is valid
for new engine with fuel conforming car manufacturer specification.
When using lower grade fuel, or worn engine the oil change interval
has to shorten accordingly. In general oils approved for extended
use are of higher specification and reduce wear. In the industrial
market place the longevity is generally measured in time units and
the lubricant marketer can suffer large financial penalties if
their claims are not substantiated.
- Efficiency:
The lubricant marketer claims improved equipment
efficiency when compared to rival products or technologies, the
claim is usually valid when comparing lubricant of higher
specification with previous grade. Typically the efficiency is
proved by showing a reduction in energy costs to operate the
system. Guaranteeing improved efficiency is the goal of some oil
test specifications such as API CI-4 Plus
for diesel engines. Some car/engine manufacturers also specifically
request certain higher efficiency level for lubricants for extended
drain intervals.
- Operational tolerance:
The lubricant is claimed to cope with specific
operational environment needs. Some common environments include
dry, wet, cold, hot, fire risk, high load, high or low speed,
chemical compatibility, atmospheric compatibility, pressure or
vacuum and various combinations. The usual thermal characteristics
is outlined with SAE viscosity given for 100°C, like SAE 30, SAE
40. For low temperature viscosity the SAE xxW mark is used. Both
markings can be combined together to form a SAE 0W-60 for example.
Viscosity
index (VI) marks viscosity change with temperature, with higher
VI numbers being more temperature stable.
- Economy:
The marketer offers a lubricant at a lower cost
than rivals either in the same grade or a similar one that will
fill the purpose for lesser price. (Stationary installations with
short drain intervals.) Alternative may be offering a more
expensive lubricant and promise return in lower wear, specific fuel
consumption or longer drain intervals. (Expensive machinery,
un-affordable downtimes.)
- Environment friendly:
The lubricant is said to be environmentally
friendly. Typically this is supported by qualifying statements or
conformance to generally accepted approvals. Several organizations,
typically government sponsored, exist globally to qualify and
approve such lubricants by evaluating their potential for
environmental harm. Typically, the lubricant manufacturer is
allowed to indicate such approval by showing some special mark.
Examples include the German “Blue
Angel”, European “Daisy” Eco label,
Global Eco-Label “GEN mark”, Nordic, “White Swan”, Japanese “Earth
friendly mark”; USA “Green Seal”, Canadian “Environmental Choice”,
Chinese “Huan”, Singapore “Green Label” and the French “NF
Environment mark”.
- Composition:
The marketer claims novel composition of the
lubricant which improves some tangible performance over its rivals.
Typically the technology is protected via formal patents or other
intellectual property protection mechanism to prevent rivals from
copying. Lot of claims in this area are simple marketing buzzwords,
since most of them are related to a manufacturer specific process
naming (which achieves similar results than other ones) but the
competition is prohibited from using a trademark.
- Quality:
The marketer claims broad superior quality of its
lubricant with no factual evidence. The quality is “proven” by
references to famous brand, sporting figure, racing team, some
professional endorsement or some similar subjective claim. All
motor oil labels wear mark similar to "of outstanding quality" or
"quality additives", the actual comparative evidence is always
lacking.
Disposal and environmental issues
It is estimated that 40% of all lubricants are released into the environment. Disposal: Recycling, burning, landfill and discharge into water may achieve disposal of used lubricant. There are typically strict regulations in most countries regarding disposal in landfill and discharge into water as even small amount of lubricant can contaminate a large amount of water. Most regulations permit a threshold level of lubricant that may be present in waste streams and companies spend hundreds of millions of dollars annually in treating their waste waters to get to acceptable levels. Burning the lubricant as fuel, typically to generate electricity, is also governed by regulations mainly on account of the relatively high level of additives present. Burning generates both airborne pollutants and ash rich in toxic materials, mainly heavy metal compounds. Thus lubricant burning takes place in specialized facilities that have incorporated special scrubbers to remove airborne pollutants and have access to landfill sites with permits to handle the toxic ash. Unfortunately, most lubricant that ends up directly in the environment is due to general public discharging it onto the ground, into drains and directly into landfills as trash. Other direct contamination sources include runoff from roadways, accidental spillages, natural or man-made disasters and pipeline leakages. Improvement in filtration technologies and processes has now made recycling a viable option (with rising price of base stock and crude oil). Typically various filtration systems remove particulates, additives and oxidation products and recover the base oil. The oil may get refined during the process. This base oil is then treated much the same as virgin base oil however there is considerable reluctance to use recycled oils as they are generally considered inferior. Basestock fractionally vacuum distilled from used lubricants has superior properties to all natural oils, but cost effectiveness depends on many factors. Used lubricant may also be used as refinery feedstock to become part of crude oil. Again there is considerable reluctance to this use as the additives, soot and wear metals will seriously poison/deactivate the critical catalysts in the process. Cost prohibits carrying out both filtration (soot, additives removal) and re-refining (distilling, isomerisation, hydrocrack, etc.) however the primary hindrance to recycling still remains the collection of fluids as refineries need continuous supply in amounts measured in cisterns, rail tanks. Occasionally, unused lubricant requires disposal. The best course of action in such situations is to return it to the manufacturer where it can be processed as a part of fresh batches. Environment: Lubricants both fresh and used can cause considerable damage to the environment mainly due to their high potential of serious water pollution. Further the additives typically contained in lubricant can be toxic to flora and fauna. In used fluids the oxidation products can be toxic as well. Lubricant persistence in the environment largely depends upon the base fluid, however if very toxic additives are used they may negatively affect the persistence. Lanolin lubricants are non-toxic making them the environmental alternative which is safe for both users and the environment.Societies and industry bodies
;STLE: Society of Tribologists and Lubrication Engineers;SAE: Society of Automotive Engineers;European Automobile Manufacturers Association: ACEAMajor publications
- Peer reviewed
- Tribology Transactions
- Journal of Synthetic Lubricants
- Trade periodicals
- Tribology and Lubrication Technology
- Lubes n’ Greases
- Compoundings
- Chemical Market Review
- Machinery lubrication
References
[1] API 1509, Engine Oil Licensing and Certification System, 15th Edition, 2002. Appendix E, API Base Oil Interchangeability Guidelines for Passenger Car Motor Oils and Diesel Engine Oils (revised)[2] Boughton and Horvath, 2003, Environmental
Assessment of Used Oil Management Methods, Environmental Science
and Technology, V38(2)
http://pubs.acs.org/cgi-bin/article.cgi/esthag/2004/38/i02/pdf/es034236p.pdf
[3] I.A. Inman. Compacted Oxide Layer Formation
under Conditions of Limited Debris Retention at the Wear Interface
during High Temperature Sliding Wear of Superalloys, Ph.D. Thesis
(2003), Northumbria University, ISBN 1-58112-321-3 (3)http://mysite.wanadoo-members.co.uk/high_temp_wear/mythesis.html
[4] Mercedes-Benz oil recommendations, extracted
from factory manuals and personal research (4)http://www.whnet.com/4x4/oil.html
[5] Measuring reserve alkalinity and evaluation
of wear dependence (5)http://www.practicingoilanalysis.com/article_detail.asp?articleid=354
[6] Testing used oil quality, list of possoble
measurements (6)http://www.practicingoilanalysis.com/article_detail.asp?articleid=873&relatedbookgroup=OilAnalysis
Most topics discussed above can be found in this
700-page long book: [7] Lubricant Additives: Chemistry and
Applications, Leslie R. Rudnick, CRC Press. (7)
http://books.google.sk/books?id=cwWgbmL5fyIC&printsec=frontcover&hl=en
See also
lubricant in Bulgarian: Лубрикант
lubricant in German: Schmierstoff
lubricant in Spanish: Lubricante
lubricant in Esperanto: Lubrikaĵo
lubricant in French: Lubrifiant
lubricant in Italian: Lubrificante
lubricant in Dutch: Glijmiddel
lubricant in Japanese: 潤滑剤
lubricant in Polish: Smar
lubricant in Portuguese: Lubrificante
lubricant in Russian: Смазочные материалы
lubricant in Simple English: Lubricant
lubricant in Swedish:
Smörjmedel