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The Second Most Destructive Lubricant Contaminate, and its Effects on Bearing Life |
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| Introduction | ||||||||||||||||||
| Moisture is generally referred to as a chemical contaminant when suspended in lubricating oils. Its destructive effects in bearing applications can reach or exceed that of particle contamination, depending on various conditions. Like particles, vigilant control must be exercised over entry of water to minimize its accumulation in the lubricants and its damage to bearing surfaces. | ||||||||||||||||||
| This paper will discuss the influence of moisture on the chemical stability of a lubricant's additives and base stock. The effects of moisture on machine surfaces, particularly as relates to wear and corrosion, will also be discussed. Finally, a three-step, proactive maintenance strategy will be proposed to minimize the effects of moisture on lubricant and bearing life. | ||||||||||||||||||
| States of Co-existence in the Lubricant | ||||||||||||||||||
| Once water enters the casing of a machine where bearings are used, such as an engine, turbine, or gear box, it may move through several chemical and physical states. These changes are complex, but important to understanding how to control and analyze its movements. To begin with, water will enter an oil in generally one of the five following ways: | ||||||||||||||||||
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| Water, once in an oil, is in constant search of a stable existence. Unlike the oil, the water molecule is polar, which greatly limits its ability to dissolve. Many additives have polar extremities which can markedly increase water's limit of solubility. In the absence of dissolved polar compounds to which water can attach, water may cling to hydrophilic metal surfaces or even form a thin film around polar solid contaminants such as silica particles. Or, if a dry air boundary exists, water molecules may simply choose to migrate out of the oil to the far more absorbent air interface. This migration can be further facilitated where air and oil mix (such conditions where high air/oil surface area are created) such as in splash lubricated and oil mist systems or any fluid system where a stable foam may exist. | ||||||||||||||||||
| If increasing amounts of water molecules are unable to find polar compounds to attach themselves, the oil is said to be saturated. Any additional amounts of water will result in a supersaturated condition causing free water to be suspended or settle in puddles at the bottom of the sump. This supersaturation can also occur as a result of lower oil temperature. When free water is suspended, a colloidal suspension or emulsion is said to exist. This causes a visible cloud or haze in the oil. By lowering interfacial tension (below 25 dynes/cm), certain dispersant additives (engine oils) and emulsifying agents can permit water in oil emulsions in excess of 10% water. Typical low-additive industrial lubricants will hold no more than 0.5% water in an emulsified state. The higher shear rates associated with high speed systems can create microemulsion of water in oil that inhibits coalescence and settling of the water. | ||||||||||||||||||
| The Effects of Water on Additives and Base Stock Lubricants | ||||||||||||||||||
| With few exceptions, the chemical and physical stability of lubricants are threatened by even the slightest amount of suspended water. Water can promote a host of chemical reactions (hydrolysis) with compounds and atomic species including oil additives, base stock and suspended contaminants. In combination with oxygen, heat, and metal catalysts, water is known to promote the oxidation and the formation of free radicals and peroxide compounds. Oxidation inhibitors are sacrificed by both neutralizing peroxides and breaking oxidation chain reactions to form stable compounds. Other oxidation inhibitors are known to form hydrogen sulfide and sulfonic acids when reacting with water. Experiments have shown the protection provided by zinc dialkyldithiophosphate (ZDDP), a common anti-wear additive and antioxidant, to be destroyed by as little as one drop of water in a gallon of oil, with oil temperature above 180 degrees F(82 degrees C). | ||||||||||||||||||
| Water is also known to attack rust inhibitors, viscosity improvers, and the oil's base stock. The effects are undesirable by-products such as varnish, sludge, organic and inorganic acids, surface deposits and lubricant thickening (polymerization). Large amounts of emulsified water can lower viscosity, thereby reducing a lubricant's load carrying ability. When water is combined with metal catalysts such as iron or copper, accelerated stressing of the oil can occur. This results in base stock oxidation and the forming of free radicals (which continue the oxidation process), hydroperoxides, and acids. | ||||||||||||||||||
| The Effects of Water on Bearing Surfaces and Bearing Life | ||||||||||||||||||
| The deleterious effects of water on the fatigue life of rolling element bearings is widely documented. According to SKF, "It is well-known that free water in lubricating oil decreases the life of rolling element bearings by ten to more than a hundred times. . ." Already mentioned are the many damaging effects water causes to the lubricant itself, resulting in a corrosive environment and diminished boundary layer and hydrodynamic protection. | ||||||||||||||||||
| The exact mechanisms by which water promotes bearing failure are not fully understood. There is much evidence that water is attracted to microscopic fatigue cracks by capillary forces in preference to the much larger hydrocarbon oil molecules. Once in contact with the free metal surfaces within the fissure, the water breaks down and liberates atomic hydrogen. This, in turn, causes further crack propagation, a process known as hydrogen embrittlement. Researchers have offered the following equation as a guide to estimating the reduced fatigue life caused by water contamination: | ||||||||||||||||||
where L = the percent of rated life X = water contamination in ppm |
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| Water etching is a common type of corrosion occurring on bearing surfaces and their raceways. This aqueous corrosion is caused primarily by the generation of hydrogen sulfide and sulfuric acid from water-induced lubricant degradation. This occurs as a result of the liberation of free sulfur during hydrolysis reactions between the lubricant and suspended water. | ||||||||||||||||||
| The elastohydrodynamic lubrication associated with rolling element bearings demands consistent oil viscosity. When water invades the lubricant, this important property can be compromised. High local area pressures under bearing contacts can reach 100,000 to 500,000 psi depending on dynamic loading and bearing size. At such pressures the lubricant film thickness is reduced to 0.1 - 3 µm and forms a momentary solid. When moisture is present, this thin oil film can fail allowing the bearing and its raceway asperities to contact. If sustained, the result will be a marked reduction in bearing fatigue life. | ||||||||||||||||||
| For journal bearings, the hydrodynamic pressures between the shaft and bearing surfaces may not exceed 1000 psi. And, depending on such factors as speed, load, viscosity, and bearing size, film thickness can range from as low as 0.5 µm to as high as 100 µm. Moisture can reduce lubricant load-carrying ability in journal bearings causing shaft and bearing contact (wiping), especially under shock loads. Reduced film thicknesses (critical clearances) also increases particle contaminant sensitivity to smaller particle sizes where high concentrations are likely to exist, usually below the size where filters are effective. | ||||||||||||||||||
| Water also contributes to various forms of corrosive and cavitation damage to journal bearing surfaces. Babbit bearings, consisting mostly of lead and tin, are easily oxidized in the presence of water and oxygen. Vaporous cavitation associated with the implosion of water vapor can form honeycomb-like pitting on bearing surfaces. A variety of chemical and electrochemical forms of surface failure have been reported to be caused by moisture in journal bearing lubricants. | ||||||||||||||||||
| Water Sequestration and Control | ||||||||||||||||||
| The universal environmental presence of water makes any effort to totally prevent it from combining with the oil of limited potential success. However, its entry can be greatly minimized and its effect on lubricant life and machine surface damage can be considerably reduced. Using the Target-Exclusion-Detection (TED) three-step, proactive maintenance strategy, is a recommended approach for achieving contamination control of moisture. | ||||||||||||||||||
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| A microphone mounted adjacent to the heating element picks up this signal and electronically passes it to the data collector for analysis. The algorithm in the data collector is calibrated to convert signal threshold crossings per unit time into moisture levels in ppm or percentage. The unit is able to detect suspended moisture to as low as 25 ppm and as high as 10,000 ppm. A typical test takes less than 30 seconds. | ||||||||||||||||||
| Summary | ||||||||||||||||||
| Moisture is known to enter lubricated bearing systems in several different ways resulting in dissolved, suspended or free water. Both dissolved and suspended water can promote rapid oxidation of the lubricant's additives and base stock resulting in diminished lubricant performance. Rolling element bearings may experience reduced fatigue life due to hydrogen embrittlement caused by water penetrated bearing surfaces. Many other moisture-induced wear and corrosion processes are common in both rolling element and journal bearings. The best defense against moisture contamination is a three-step, proactive maintenance strategy called Target-Exclusion-Detection (TED). Only when lower moisture levels are consistently stabilized can the life extension of lubricants and bearings be effectively achieved. | ||||||||||||||||||
| References: | ||||||||||||||||||
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