Tribological Study Of Jatropha Oil As Boundary Lubricant
Application of jatropha oil as boundary lubricant has been studied. In this research, boundary friction and wear preventive characteristics of jatropha oil as boundary lubricant were established. Structural modification and the use of selective additives were also studied to solve poor oxidation...
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TJ Mechanical engineering and machinery SYAH LUBIS, ABDUL MUNIR HIDAYAT Tribological Study Of Jatropha Oil As Boundary Lubricant |
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Application of jatropha oil as boundary lubricant has been studied. In this research,
boundary friction and wear preventive characteristics of jatropha oil as boundary
lubricant were established. Structural modification and the use of selective additives
were also studied to solve poor oxidation behavior of jatropha oil problem which
could influence the oil performance as boundary lubricant. The main objectives of this
research are: (i) to synthesize the derivatives of jatropha oil and establish their
boundary friction, wear preventive, and thermo-oxidation properties, and (ii) to solve
oxidative stability and wear preventive problem/issues of crude jatropha oil by the use
of antioxidant additives and anti-wear additives. The friction and wear preventive
properties were characterized by four-ball method. The thermo-oxidative behavior of
the oil was studied by thermo-gravimetric analysis (TGA) and air bubbling oxidation
methods. The modification of unsaturated carbon bond contained in crude jatropha oil
(CJO) via epoxidation process was able to improve thermo-oxidative properties of
jatropha oil. Epoxidized jatropha oil (EJO) show a higher first thermal degradation
point of jatropha oil under oxidized condition compared to crude jatropha oil. It is
also show significant reduction in the viscosity changes caused by high temperature
obtained by air bubbling oxidation method. However, no significant effect to friction
coefficient (μ), the value were μ
CJO
= 0.067 while μ
EJO
=0.065. But the epoxidized
jatropha oil was found to show better wear preventive characteristics compared to
jatropha oil, which average wear scar diameter of EJO is 0.581 mm while average
wear scar diameter of CJO is 0.607 mm. The modification of unsaturated carbon bond
via two stage esterification processes was not significantly able to improve the
thermo-oxidative properties of jatropha oil. The first thermal degradation point of
esterified fatty acid jatropha oil (EFA-JO) under oxidized condition was found lower
than crude jatropha oil, although the viscosity changes caused by high temperature
obtained by air bubbling oxidation method was significantly lower than jatropha oil.
viii
Friction coefficient of esterified fatty acid jatropha oil (EFA-JO) also show a higher
value compared to crude jatropha oil (μEFA-JO = 0.075) and also show higher wear than
crude jatropha oil (average wear scar diameter of EFA-JO is 0.779 mm). Addition of
the octadecyl 3-(3,5-di-tert-butyl-4-hydroxyphenyl)propionate as an antioxidant
additive was able to improved thermo-oxidative properties of jatropha oil. Addition
1-5 wt. % of this additive could raise the first thermal degradation point of jatropha oil
under oxidized condition from 168°C up to 200°C. It is also show significant
reduction in the viscosity changes caused by high temperature obtained by air
bubbling oxidation method. Addition of tricresyl phosphate (TCP) as an anti-wear
additive was significantly improved wear preventive capability of jatropha oil.
Addition 1-5 wt. % of this additive to jatropha oil could reduce the average wear scar
diameter of test the bearing from 0.607 mm up to 0.328 mm. Blend of tricresyl
phosphate and octadecyl 3-(3,5-di-tert-butyl-4-hydroxyphenyl)propionate also found
able to improves friction, wear, and thermo-oxidative properties of crude jatropha oil.
The study also found that the optimum blend, consisting of 3.59 wt.% of octadecyl 3-
(3,5-di-tert-butyl-4-hydroxyphenyl)propionate and 4.42 wt.% of tricresyl phosphate in
crude jatropha oil, has friction coefficient of μ = 0.045 and average wear scar
diameter of 0.324 mm. Further studies related to enhancement of boundary lubrication
properties of jatropha oil such as structural modification or the use additives are
highly recommended. |
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Thesis |
author |
SYAH LUBIS, ABDUL MUNIR HIDAYAT |
author_facet |
SYAH LUBIS, ABDUL MUNIR HIDAYAT |
author_sort |
SYAH LUBIS, ABDUL MUNIR HIDAYAT |
title |
Tribological Study Of Jatropha Oil As Boundary Lubricant |
title_short |
Tribological Study Of Jatropha Oil As Boundary Lubricant |
title_full |
Tribological Study Of Jatropha Oil As Boundary Lubricant |
title_fullStr |
Tribological Study Of Jatropha Oil As Boundary Lubricant |
title_full_unstemmed |
Tribological Study Of Jatropha Oil As Boundary Lubricant |
title_sort |
tribological study of jatropha oil as boundary lubricant |
publishDate |
2013 |
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http://utpedia.utp.edu.my/15126/1/Munir-Final%20Thesis-after%20viva%20%282%29.pdf http://utpedia.utp.edu.my/15126/ |
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my-utp-utpedia.151262017-01-25T09:38:14Z http://utpedia.utp.edu.my/15126/ Tribological Study Of Jatropha Oil As Boundary Lubricant SYAH LUBIS, ABDUL MUNIR HIDAYAT TJ Mechanical engineering and machinery Application of jatropha oil as boundary lubricant has been studied. In this research, boundary friction and wear preventive characteristics of jatropha oil as boundary lubricant were established. Structural modification and the use of selective additives were also studied to solve poor oxidation behavior of jatropha oil problem which could influence the oil performance as boundary lubricant. The main objectives of this research are: (i) to synthesize the derivatives of jatropha oil and establish their boundary friction, wear preventive, and thermo-oxidation properties, and (ii) to solve oxidative stability and wear preventive problem/issues of crude jatropha oil by the use of antioxidant additives and anti-wear additives. The friction and wear preventive properties were characterized by four-ball method. The thermo-oxidative behavior of the oil was studied by thermo-gravimetric analysis (TGA) and air bubbling oxidation methods. The modification of unsaturated carbon bond contained in crude jatropha oil (CJO) via epoxidation process was able to improve thermo-oxidative properties of jatropha oil. Epoxidized jatropha oil (EJO) show a higher first thermal degradation point of jatropha oil under oxidized condition compared to crude jatropha oil. It is also show significant reduction in the viscosity changes caused by high temperature obtained by air bubbling oxidation method. However, no significant effect to friction coefficient (μ), the value were μ CJO = 0.067 while μ EJO =0.065. But the epoxidized jatropha oil was found to show better wear preventive characteristics compared to jatropha oil, which average wear scar diameter of EJO is 0.581 mm while average wear scar diameter of CJO is 0.607 mm. The modification of unsaturated carbon bond via two stage esterification processes was not significantly able to improve the thermo-oxidative properties of jatropha oil. The first thermal degradation point of esterified fatty acid jatropha oil (EFA-JO) under oxidized condition was found lower than crude jatropha oil, although the viscosity changes caused by high temperature obtained by air bubbling oxidation method was significantly lower than jatropha oil. viii Friction coefficient of esterified fatty acid jatropha oil (EFA-JO) also show a higher value compared to crude jatropha oil (μEFA-JO = 0.075) and also show higher wear than crude jatropha oil (average wear scar diameter of EFA-JO is 0.779 mm). Addition of the octadecyl 3-(3,5-di-tert-butyl-4-hydroxyphenyl)propionate as an antioxidant additive was able to improved thermo-oxidative properties of jatropha oil. Addition 1-5 wt. % of this additive could raise the first thermal degradation point of jatropha oil under oxidized condition from 168°C up to 200°C. It is also show significant reduction in the viscosity changes caused by high temperature obtained by air bubbling oxidation method. Addition of tricresyl phosphate (TCP) as an anti-wear additive was significantly improved wear preventive capability of jatropha oil. Addition 1-5 wt. % of this additive to jatropha oil could reduce the average wear scar diameter of test the bearing from 0.607 mm up to 0.328 mm. Blend of tricresyl phosphate and octadecyl 3-(3,5-di-tert-butyl-4-hydroxyphenyl)propionate also found able to improves friction, wear, and thermo-oxidative properties of crude jatropha oil. The study also found that the optimum blend, consisting of 3.59 wt.% of octadecyl 3- (3,5-di-tert-butyl-4-hydroxyphenyl)propionate and 4.42 wt.% of tricresyl phosphate in crude jatropha oil, has friction coefficient of μ = 0.045 and average wear scar diameter of 0.324 mm. Further studies related to enhancement of boundary lubrication properties of jatropha oil such as structural modification or the use additives are highly recommended. 2013-12 Thesis NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en http://utpedia.utp.edu.my/15126/1/Munir-Final%20Thesis-after%20viva%20%282%29.pdf SYAH LUBIS, ABDUL MUNIR HIDAYAT (2013) Tribological Study Of Jatropha Oil As Boundary Lubricant. PhD thesis, Universiti Teknologi Petronas. |