4.3 Article

Basestock oils for lubricants from mixtures of corn oil and synthetic diesters

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN OIL CHEMISTS SOCIETY
Volume 85, Issue 1, Pages 71-76

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11746-007-1156-z

Keywords

lubricants; vegetable oils; synthetic esters

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Environmentally friendly vegetable oils and their derivatives represent alternatives to mineral-based lubricants. Vegetable oils have high biodegradability and low production costs. Their poor thermo-oxidative stability and poor low temperature properties are disadvantages in their use as lubricant basestocks. In our study we used corn oil and diester mixtures, which become lubricants when additives are introduced. These mixtures of corn oil and di-2-ethylhexyl-adipate (DOA) and di-2-ethylhexyl-sebacate (DOS) offer a wide range of kinematic viscosities, pour points lower than -39 degrees C and flash points over 218 degrees C. The diameters of wear scars measured under four-ball testing (40 daN) are less than 0.90 mm and the copper strip corrosion test result is 1a. The differential scanning calorimetry study and thermogravimetric study under nitrogen atmosphere and in synthetic air are reported. From these studies a higher thermal stability was observed for corn oil than for diester oils. The thermo-oxidative instability occurred at temperatures higher than 350 degrees C. The low production cost of corn oil and its mixtures with diesters makes them an attractive alternative to mineral oil lubricants.

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