Grease Selection Guide
Grease Selection Guide
The first aluminium, barium and lithium complex soap lubricating greases were patented in 1952. Since then, a large
number of lubricating grease patents have been granted, due to the large number of thickeners, base oils, and additives
that can be used. New or improved lubricating grease production processes were also developed.
The quantity of lubricating greases sold in Australia amounts to approximately 13 million kilograms in 1994 - is only a
small fraction of the total lubricant consumption of 500 million Litres.
The situation is similar in other industrialised countries. The relatively small proportion of grease sales belies the
enormous importance of lubricating greases for business and technology, which can be attributed to the high level of
quality they have achieved and the performance characteristics which have resulted. Metal soap greases are the clear
leaders in grease sales statistics, while non-soap greases as a group are of little importance in quantitative terms.
In engineering terms, however, and in terms of "modern and intelligent lubricating grease design," non-soap greases, for
example those containing synthetic organic thickeners and synthetic base oils, are more modern, promising products.
The classification of lubricating greases is not uniformly regulated. Because of the versatility and the variations in their
composition, greases are essentially classified on the basis of their base oil or thickener.
Base Oils
The oil present in a lubricating grease is referred to as its base oil. The proportion of base oil can vary depending on the
type and quantity of thickener and the intended application of the grease. For most greases, the base oil content is
between 85% and 97%.
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The type of base oil give a grease some of its typical characteristics.
Thickeners
Thickeners are divided into soaps and non-soaps, and give lubricating greases their typical properties as well. Soap
greases can be divided into simple and complex soap greases, each of which are referred to by the name of the cation
on which the soap is bases (e.g. lithium, sodium, calcium, barium, or aluminium soap greases).
These metal soaps are made from fatty acids, which are products obtained from animal or vegetable oils and fats.
These fatty acids are a mixture of a wide variety of chemically defined fatty acids. They are split into fatty acids and
glycerides by hydrolytic decomposition. The fatty acids are then combined with the corresponding metal hydroxides to
form the metal soaps used as thickeners for lubricating grease production.
Additives
Additives counteract wear and corrosion, provide additional friction reducing effects, improve the adhesion of the grease,
and prevent damage under boundary and mixed friction conditions.
Additives therefore affect the quality, potential applications, and ultimately the practical value of the grease. Additives
can be solid, polar, or polymeric.
Solid Additives
Graphite, Molybdenum Disulfide, Zinc Sulfide, talc, polytetrafluoroethylene, etc. are incorporated into greases in powder
form or as pigments. They act in the boundary and mixed friction regions. Solid additives improve running-in and
emergency operating characteristics.
Polar Additives
Polar substances are hydrocarbon molecules which behave in an electrically non-neutral way because of their molecular
structure (i.e. by incorporating other elements such as oxygen, sulfur, or chlorine), and are retained on metal surfaces as
if they were magnetic. The presence of polar substances increases adhesion of the lubricant film, since pure
hydrocarbons are "non-polar".
Polymer Additives
The correlation between temperature and the viscosity of mineral oils can be influenced by additives. These additives
consist of organic polymers with molecular weights of between 10,000 and 200,000. At moderate temperatures their
chain-like molecules are tangled together, but at high temperatures they extend into elongated threads. By
simultaneously switching to a low-viscosity base oil with a higher viscosity index (VI), the viscosity-temperature curve
can be flattened. The presence of polymers makes the viscosity of a base oil dependent on the shear rate.
Polymers generally improve the wear protection offered by lubricants. Polymers used as adhesion additives for greases
include polyisobutylenes, olefin polymers, and others. They improve the grease's adhesion to surfaces.
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© 2019 Trade-School.Education All Rights Reserved
Because the authors and publisher do not know the context in which the information presented in the Newsletter is to be
used they accept no responsibility for the consequences of using the information contained or implied in any articles