A PROPOSED METHOD FOR TESTING OILS AND RECLAIMING USED GAS ENGINE OILS.

2009 ◽  
Vol 37 (4) ◽  
pp. 772-780
Author(s):  
Z. W. WICKS ◽  
R. F. MCCALL
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
Laurent Chambard ◽  
John Smythe

Additive technologies able to successfully lubricate gas engines have been available for many years, but in recent years the acceleration of both commercial and technical demands placed on gas engine lubricants has highlighted the performance limits of traditional additive solutions. One of these limits is the ability to reach long and very long oil drains, required by an increasing number of operators. Since traditional additive chemistries on conventional base oil systems have reached their limits in that respect, focus has been increasingly placed on using higher performance base oils so that longer oil drains can be reached. However, traditional additive chemistries have often proved to struggle in these higher performance base oils, particularly in the aspect of deposit control — demonstrating that a new generation of additive systems for the formulation of gas engine oils is needed. The authors present one such generation of additive systems, developed around off-the-beaten-track detergent technology; providing superior control of oxidation and deposits. Such additive systems can be used either in conventional base oil systems with improved drain interval, or in high performance base oil systems with very long drain interval and excellent control of deposits. Besides the description of the chemistry involved, the authors also present a methodology of performance evaluation in the laboratory, and compare this methodology with the performance perceived in the field.


Author(s):  
N. Doerr ◽  
C. Schneidhofer

Recently, a number of sensor principles to measure physical and chemical properties of lubricating oils were investigated. The crucial property of lubricating oils for some applications is the degree of acidification as there is a correlation to corrosive wear of engine components. Corrosiveness is of particular importance for biogas engines due to the fact that bio-fuels are forming more aggressive components during the combustion process as in comparison with conventional fuels. Recent research showed that the corrosiveness of oil cannot be described sufficiently by conventional oil parameters such as total acid number and neutralization number. We propose a sensor concept using the effect of material loss of a thin metal film due to corrosion. The signal of the sensor being immersed in used gas engine oils with corrosive compounds showed good correlation with selected oil properties determined in the laboratory.


Author(s):  
Толмачев ◽  
D. Tolmachev ◽  
Голубенко ◽  
Natalya Golubenko

The article describes some of chemmotology processes in systems: engine oil – elements of internal combustion engines. Motor oil is regarded as an important element in the construction of an internal combustion engine, and it is necessary to make quantitative description of its condition which changing over time for its operability forecasting. In connection with the increasing number of vehicles with gas engines, the topics of necessity of special engine oils use for the gas internal combustion engine and of monitoring of their quality indicators are mentioned


1998 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wim van Dam ◽  
John P. Graham ◽  
Robert T. Stockwell ◽  
Alfredo M. Montez

Author(s):  
J. Felkel ◽  
N. Doerr ◽  
K. Varmuza

The acid number (AN) is considered an important indicator of oil condition, especially in terms of defining oil oxidation and the extent of acidification of used oils collected from two engines, each running with a different biogas. The results of chemometrical models comprising principal component analysis (PCA) for qualitative evaluation and partial least squares regression (PLS) for quantitative evaluation of used gas engine oils, respectively, are discussed. The investigations are based on infrared spectrometry and acid number measurements of monograde mineral-oil-based gas engine oils SAE 40. It is reported how IR spectrometry and chemometrics can be used to reveal the influence of the gas fuel type on oil aging (PCA) and for the indirect determination of the acid number (PLS). In contrast to the conventional time-consuming AN determination according to ASTM D 664, the joint use of IR spectrometry and chemometrics offers results within a few minutes. The chemometrical “measurement error” is in the range of precision and bias of the standard method.


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