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Glossary
Definitions:
A B C
D E F G
H I J K
L M N O
P Q R S
T U V W
X Y Z
Abbreviations Organizations
B
- Babbitt Metal
- A soft, white, non-ferrous alloy bearing material composed principally
of copper, antimony, tin and lead.
- Bactericide
- Additive included in the formulations of water-mixed cutting fluids
to inhibit the growth of bacteria promoted by the presence of water,
thus preventing odors that can result from bacterial action.
- Ball bearing
- An antifriction rolling type bearing containing rolling elements in the form of balls or spheres.
- Barrel
- A unit of liquid volume of petroleum oils equal to 42 U.S. gallons
or approximately 35 Imperial gallons.
- Base
- A material which neutralizes acids. An oil additive containing colloidally dispersed metal carbonate, used to reduce corrosive wear.
- Base oil credit
- The amount of the base fluid displaced by the additive dosage.
- A material which neutralizes acids. An oil additive containing colloidally
dispersed metal carbonate, used to reduce corrosive wear.
- Base stock
- The base fluid, usually a refined petroleum fraction or a selected
synthetic material, into which additives are blended to produce finished
lubricants.
- Batch
- Any quantity of material handled or considered as a unit in processing.
- Bearing
- A support or guide by means of which a moving part such as a shaft
or axle is positioned with respect to the other parts of a mechanism.
- Bentonite
- The mineral montmorillonite, a magnesium-aluminum silicate. Used as
a treating agent, also, as a component of drilling mud, and in greases.
- Benzene
- Colorless liquid hydrocarbon C6H6, with one ring of carbon atoms.
Made from coal tar and by catalytic reforming of naphthyenes, it is
used in the manufacture of phenol, styrene, nylon, detergents, aniline,
phthalic anhydride, biphenyl, nitrobenzene, chlorbenzene; as a solvent;
and as a component of high-octane gasoline.
- Benzene Insoluble
- That portion of the normal pentane insoluble in used lubricating oils
which is not soluble in benzene, and which may include the insoluble
contaminants from external sources, some matter produced by oxidation
and thermal decomposition of the oil, the oil additives, or the fuel.
(ASTM Method D 893).
- Beta Rating
- The method of comparing filter performance based on efficiency. This
is done using the Multi-Pass Test which counts the number of particles
of a given size before and after fluid passes through a filter.
- Beta-Ratio (fl-Ratio)
- The ratio of the number of particles greater than a given size in
the influent fluid to the number of particles greater than the same
size in the effluent fluid, under specified test conditions (see "Multi-Pass
Test").
- Bitumen
- Also called asphalt or tar, bitumen is the brown or black viscous
residue from the vacuum distillation of crude petroleum. It also occurs
in nature as asphalt "lakes" and "tar sands." It consists of high molecular
weight hydrocarbons and minor amounts of sulfur and nitrogen compounds.
- Black oils
- Lubricants containing asphaltic materials, which impart extra adhesiveness,
that are used for open gears and steel cables.
- Blending
- The process of mixing lubricants or components for the purpose of
obtaining the desired physical and/or chemical properties (see compounding).
- Bloom
- Fluorescence; the color of an oil by reflected light which could differ
from its color by transmitted light.
- Blow-by
- Passage of unburned fuel and combustion gases past the piston rings
of internal combustion engines, resulting in fuel dilution and contamination
of the crankcase oil.
- Boiling Point
- The temperature at which a substance boils, or is converted into vapor
by bubbles forming within the liquid; it varies pressure.
- Bottoms
- The liquid which collects in the bottom of a vessel (tower bottoms,
tank bottoms), either during a fractionating process or while in storage.
- Boundary lubrication
- Form of lubrication between two rubbing surfaces without development
of a full-fluid lubricating film. Boundary lubrication can be made more
effective by including additives in the lubricating oil that provide
a stronger oil film, thus preventing excessive friction and possible
scoring. There are varying degrees of boundary lubrication, depending
on the severity of service. For mild conditions, oiliness agents may
be used; by plating out on metal surfaces in a thin but durable film,
oiliness agents prevent scoring under some conditions that are too severe
for a straight mineral oil. Compounded oils, which are formulated with
polar fatty oils, are sometimes used for this purpose. Anti-wear additives
are commonly used in more severe boundary lubrication applications.
The more severe cases of boundary lubrication are defined as extreme
pressure conditions; they are met with lubricants containing EP additives
that prevent sliding surfaces from fusing together at high local temperatures
and pressures.
- Breakdown maintenance
- Maintenance performed after a machine has failed to return it to an
operating state.
- Bridging
- A condition of filter element loading in which contaminant spans the
space between adjacent sections of a filter element, thus blocking a
portion of the useful filtration.
- Bright stock
- A heavy residual lubricant stock with low pour point, used in finished
blends to provide good bearing film strength, prevent scuffing, and
reduce oil consumption. Usually identified by its viscosity, SUS at
210°F or cSt at 100°C.
- Brinelling
- Permanent deformation of the bearing surfaces where the rollers (or
balls) contact the races. Brinelling results from excessive load or
impact on stationary bearings. It is a form of mechanical damage in
which metal is displaced or upset without attrition.
- Brookfield viscosity
- Apparent viscosity in cP determined by Brookfield viscometer, which
measures the torque required to rotate a spindle at constant speed in
oil of a given temperature. Basis for ASTM Method D 2983; used for measuring
low temperature viscosity of lubricants.
- Bubble point
- The differential gas pressure at which the first steady stream of
gas bubbles is emitted from a wetted filter element under specified
test conditions.
- Built-in-dirt
- Material passed into the effluent stream composed of foreign materials
incorporated into the filter medium.
- Bulk modulus (of elasticity)
- A ratio of normal stress to a change in volume. A term used in determining
the compressibility of a fluid. Data for petroleum products can be found
in the International Critical Tables.
- Bunker "C" fuel Oil
- Burst pressure rating the maximum specified inside-out differential
pressure that can be applied to a filter element without outward structural
or filter-medium failure.
- Bushing
- A short, externally threaded connector with a smaller size internal
thread.
- Butane
- Either of two isomeric, flammable, gaseous hydrocarbons, C4H10, of
the paraffin series n-butane or isobutane.
- Bypass Filtration
- A system of filtration in which only a portion of the total flow of
a circulating fluid system passes through a filter at any instant or
in which a filter having its own circulating pump operates in parallel
to the main flow.
- Bypass valve (Relief valve)
- A valve mechanism that assures system fluid flow when a preselected
differential pressure across the filter element is exceeded; the valve
allows all or part of the flow to bypass the filter element.
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