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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
A
- Abrasion
- General wearing of a surface by constant scratching, due to the presence
of foreign matter such as metallic particles grit, or dirt in the lubricant.
It may also cause a break down of material (such as gears tooth's surfaces).
Lack of lubrication may result in abrasion.
- Abrasive wear
- Also known as "Cutting wear". Comes when hard surface asperities or hard particles that have embedded themselves into a soft surface and plough grooves into the opposing harder surface, e.g., journal.
- Absolute filtration rating
- Largest diameter of hard spherical particles that will pass through
a filter under specified test conditions. Indicator of largest opening
in the filter elements.
- Absolute Viscosity
- Term used interchangeably with viscosity to distinguish it from either
commercial or kinematics viscosity. Is the ratio of shear stress to
shear rate. It is property of fluid, a fluid's internal resistance to
flow. Its common unit is the poise. Absolute viscosity divided by the
fluid density equals kinematics viscosity. Occasionally referred to
as dynamic viscosity. Absolute viscosity and kinematics viscosity are
expressed in fundamental units. Commercial viscosity such as Saybolt
viscosity is expressed in arbitrary units of time, usually seconds.
- Absorber Filter
- A filter medium that holds contaminant by mechanical means.
- Absorption
- The assimilation of one material into another; in petroleum refining,
the use of an absorptive liquid to selectively remove components from
a process stream.
- Accumulator
- A container in which fluid is stored under pressure as a source of
fluid power.
- Acid
- In a restricted sense, any substance containing hydrogen in combination
with a nonmetal or nonmetallic radical and capable of producing hydrogen
ions in solution.
- Acid Sludge
- The residue left after treating petroleum oil with sulfuric acid for
the removal of impurities. It is a black, viscous substance containing
the spent acid and impurities.
- Acid Treating
- A refining process in which unfinished petroleum products, such as
gasoline, kerosene and lubricating oil stocks, are contacted with sulfuric
acid to improve their color, odor, and other properties.
- Acidity
- In lubricants, acidity denotes the presence of acid-type constituents
whose concentration is usually defined in terms of total acid number.
The constituents vary in nature and may or may not markedly influence
the behavior of the lubricant.
- Additive
- A compound that enhances some property of, or imparts some new property
to, the base fluid. In some hydraulic fluid formulations, the additive
volume may constitute as much as 20 percent of the final composition.
The more important types of additives include anti-oxidants, anti-wear
additives, corrosion inhibitors, viscosity index improvers, and foam
suppressants.
- Additive Level
- The total percentage of all additives in an oil.
- Additive stability
- The ability of additives in the fluid to resist changes in their performance
during storage or use.
- Adhesion
- The property of a lubricant that causes it to cling or adhere to a
solid surface.
- Adhesive wear
- Is often referred to as galling, scuffing, scoring, or seizing. It
happens when sliding surfaces contact one another, causing fragments
to be pulled from one surface and to adhere to the other.
- Adiabatic compression
- Compression of a gas without extraction of heat, resulting in increased temperature. The temperature developed in compression of a gas is an important factor in lubrication, since oil deteriorates more rapidly at elevated temperatures. Oxidation inhibitors help prevent rapid lubricant breakdown under these conditions.
- Adsorbent filter
- A filter medium primarily intended to hold soluble and insoluble contaminants
on its surface by molecular adhesion.
- Adsorption
- Adhesion of the molecules of gases, liquids, or dissolved substances
to a solid surface, resulting in relatively high concentration of the
molecules at the place of contact; e.g. the plating out of an anti-wear
additive on metal surfaces.
- Adsorptive filtration
- The attraction to, and retention of particles in, a filter medium
by electrostatic forces, or by molecular attraction between the particles
and the medium.
- Aeration
- The state of air being suspended in a liquid such as a lubricant or
hydraulic fluid.
- Aftercooling
- The process of cooling compressed gases under constant pressure after the final stage of compression.
- Afterrunning
- Also known as dieseling. When a spark-ignited engine continues to run after the ignition has been turned off. There are two basic causes of afterrunning: surface and compression ignition. In surface ignition, the surfaces of the combustion chamber remain hot enough to provide a source of ignition after the spark ignition is terminated. In compression ignition, the conditions of temperature, pressure, fuel composition, and engine idle speed allow ignition to continue.
- Agglomeration
- The potential of the system for particle attraction and adhesion.
- Air Breather
- A device permitting air movement between the atmosphere and the component in/on which it is installed.
- Air, Compressed
- Air at any pressure greater than atmospheric pressure.
- Air Entrainment
- The incorporation of air in the form of bubbles as a dispersed phase in the bulk liquid. Air may be entrained in a liquid through mechanical means and/or by release of dissolved air due to a sudden change in environment. The presence of entrained air is usually readily apparent from the appearance of the liquid (i.e., bubbly, opaque, etc.) while dissolved air can only be determined by analysts.
- Alkali
- Any substance having basic (as opposed to acidic) properties. In a
restricted sense it is applied to the hydroxides of ammonium, lithium,
potassium and sodium. Alkaline materials in lubricating oils neutralize
acids to prevent acidic and corrosive wear in internal combustion engines.
- Almen EP Lubricant Tester
- A journal bearing machine used for determining the load-carrying capacity
or extreme pressure properties of gear lubricants.
- Ambient Temperature
- Temperature of the area or atmosphere around a process (not the operating
temperature of the process itself).
- Analytical ferrography
- The magnetic precipitation and subsequent analysis of wear debris
from a fluid sample This approach involves passing a volume of fluid
over a chemically treated microscope slide which is supported over a
magnetic field. Permanent magnets are arranged in such a way as to create
a varying field strength over the length of the substrate. This varying
strength causes wear debris to precipitate in a distribution with respect
to size and mass over the Ferrogram. Once rinsed and fixed to the substrate,
this debris deposit serves as an excellent media for optical analysis
of the composite wear particulates.
- Anhydrous
- Free of water, especially of crystallization.
- Aniline Point
- The minimum temperature for complete miscibility of equal volumes
of aniline and the sample under test ASTM Method D 611. A product of
high aniline point will be low in aromatics and naphthenes and, therefore,
high in paraffins. Aniline point is often specified for spray oils,
cleaning solvents, and thinners, where effectiveness depends upon aromatic
content. In conjunction with API gravity, the aniline point may be used
calculate the net heat of combustion for aviation fuels.
- Anti-foam agent
- One of two types of additives used to reduce foaming in petroleum
products: silicone oil to break up large surface bubbles, and various
kinds of polymers that decrease the amount of small bubbles entrained
in the oils.
- Anti-freeze Solution
- A fluid, such as ethylene or propylene glycol, which is added to or
used to replace the water in the cooling system of engines in order
to prevent freezing.
- Anti-friction bearing
- A rolling contact type bearing in which the rotating or moving member
is supported or guided by means of ball or roller elements. Does not
mean without friction.
- Antiknock
- Resistance to detonation or pinging in spark-ignition engines.
- Anti-oxidants
- Prolong the induction period of a base oil in the presence of oxidizing conditions and catalyst metals at elevated temperatures. The additive is consumed and degradation products increase not only with increasing and sustained temperature, but also with increases in mechanical agitation or turbulence and contamination - air, water, metallic particles, and dust. Also known as an oxidation inhibitor.
- Antistatic (additive)
- An additive that increases the conductivity of a hydrocarbon fuel
to hasten the dissipation of electrostatic charges during high-speed
dispensing, thereby reducing the fire/explosion hazard.
- Antiwear (additives)
- Improve the service life of tribological elements operating in the
boundary lubrication regime. Antiwear compounds (for example, ZDDP and
TCP) start decomposing at 90Î to 100ÎC and even at a lower temperature
if water (25 to 50 ppm) is present.
- API Gravity
- A gravity scale established by the American Petroleum Institute and
in general use in the petroleum industry, the unit being called "the
A.P.I. degree." This unit is defined in terms of specific gravity as
follows:

- Apparent Viscosity
- The ratio of shear stress to rate of shear of a non-Newtonian fluid
such as lubricating grease, calculated from Poiseuille's equation and
measured in poises. The apparent viscosity changes with changing rates
of shear and temperature and must therefore, be reported as the value
at a given shear rate and temperature (ASTM Method D 1092).
- Aromatic
- Derived from or characterized by, the presence of the benzene ring.
- Ash
- Inorganic residue of combustion left in oil.
- Ash Content
- The percent by weight of residue left after combustion of an oil sample (ASTM Method D 482). Determined by burning the oil and weighing the residue.
- Asperities
- Microscopic projections on metal surfaces resulting from normal surface-finishing
processes. Interference between opposing asperities in sliding or rolling
applications is a source of friction, and can lead to metal welding
and scoring. Ideally, the lubricating film between two moving surfaces
should be thicker than the combined height of the opposing asperities.
- Asphalt
- Black to dark-brown solid or semisolid cemetitious material which
gradually liquifies when heated and in which the predominating constituents
are bitumen's. These occur in the solid or semisolid form in nature;
are obtained by refining petroleum; or are combinations with one another
or with petroleum or derivatives thereof.
- Asphaltic
- Essentially composed of, or similar to, asphalt; frequently used to
describe lubricating oils derived from crude oils which contain asphalt.
- ASTM Colorimeter
- Apparatus widely used for determining the color of lubricating oils/(ASTM
Method D 1500). The color so determined in known as ASTM color.
- ASTM Distillation
- A distillation test made on such products as gasoline and kerosene
to determine the initial and final boiling points (ASTM Method D 86).
- ASTM Gum Test
- An analytical method for determining the amount of existing gum in
a gasoline; by evaporating a sample from a glass dish on an elevated-temperature
bath (ASTM Method D 381 and ASTM Method D 525).
- ASTM Melting Point
- The temperature at which wax first shows a minimum rate of temperature change; also known as the English melting point.
- ASTM Viscosity Classification
- A method of specifying viscosity levels for industrial lubricants;
does not denote quality.
- Auto Ignition
- The spontaneous ignition, and the resulting very rapid reaction, of
a portion or all of the fuel-air mixture in an engine. The flame speed
is many times greater than that which follows normal spark ignition.
The noise associated with it is called knock.
- Aviation Method
- A method for determining the knock-limited power, under lean-mixture
condition, of fuels for use in spark-ignition aircraft engines (ASTM
Method D 614).
- Atomic absorption spectroscopy
- Measures the radiation absorbed by chemically unbound atoms by analyzing
the transmitted energy relative to the incident energy at each frequency.
The procedure consists of diluting the fluid sample with methyl isobutyl
ketone (MIBK) and directly aspirating the solution. The actual process
of atomization involves reducing the solution to a fine spray, dissolving
it, and finally vaporizing it with a flame. The vaporization of the
metal particles depends upon their time in the flame, the flame temperature,
and the composition of the flame gas. The spectrum occurs because atoms
in the vapor state can absorb radiation at certain well-defined characteristic
wave lengths. The wave length bands absorbed are very narrow and differ
for each element. In addition, the absorption of radiant energy by electronic
transitions from ground to excited state is essentially and absolute
measure of the number of atoms in the flame and is, therefore, the concentration
of the element in a sample.
- Axial-load bearing
- A bearing in which the load acts in the direction of the axis of rotation. Also known as a thrust bearing.
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