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You are here: Home / Articles / Oil — How Clean Does it Have to Be?

by Mike Sondalini Leave a Comment

Oil — How Clean Does it Have to Be?

Oil — How Clean Does it Have to Be?

Clean, dry oil can extend equipment life between failure up to 8 – 10 times the normal operating life. Timken, the bearing manufacturer, reports that reducing water levels from 100 ppm (parts per million) to 25 ppm increases bearing life 2 times. British hydraulics research indicates that if solids contamination with particles larger than 5 microns (0.005 mm or 0.0002”) is reduced from the range of 5,000 – 10,000 particles per milliliter of oil to 160 – 320 particles, the machine life is increased 5 times.

It is clear that there is great benefit to be gained in having clean oil and that it may be well worth spending a lot of money to achieve it. This would be the case where expensive equipment was used and the cost of maintenance was high or where the equipment was costly but not highly profitable to operate. Increasing the equipment life and the period between maintenance up to ten times normal would be highly profitable in both cases. On the other hand if the cost of replacement equipment is cheap it is unlikely to be justifiable to spend money on oil filtration.

Grading Oil Cleanliness

Solid particle counts in oil can be done with optical equipment (microscope, light extinction), with an electron-scanning microscope (ESM) or by sifting through screens. Each procedure produces slightly different particle counts due to their varying sensitivity in detecting particles of different sizes. The ESM detects many more of the smaller particles than the optical methods.

Counting standard ISO 4406 -1999 is used internationally to rate solids contamination of oils. This standard classifies the cleanliness of oil and provides a basis to define acceptable solids contamination. It also means oil filters can be tested to prove their performance meets acceptable standards. Table No. 1 is part of the ISO 4406 method of coding the level of solid particles in an oil sample. The solid particle content of oil gets a classification that represents the number of particles of a particular size range.

ISO Scale Number page4image44176.png

Particles per milliliter
More Than          Less Than

page4image45664.png page4image45664.png

22

20000 40000
page4image45664.png page4image45664.png

21

page4image45664.png page4image45664.png

10000 20000
20 5000 10000
page4image45664.png page4image45664.png

19

page4image45664.png page4image45664.png

2500 5000
18 1300 2500
page4image45664.png page4image45664.png

17

640 1300
page4image45664.png page4image45664.png

16

page4image45664.png page4image45664.png

320 640
15 160 320
page4image45664.png page4image45664.png

14

80 160
page4image45664.png page4image45664.png

13

page4image45664.png page4image45664.png

40 80
12 20 40
page4image45664.png page4image45664.png

11

10 20
page4image45664.png page4image45664.png

10

page4image45664.png page4image45664.png

5 10
9 2.5 5
page4image45664.png page4image45664.png page4image90840.png

8

1.25 page4image90840.png

2.5

Table No. 1 Allocation of Particle Count Scale Numbers

Where calibrated automatic counting devices are used to measure contamination; three scale-numbers are used to describe solids contamination. These are the 4 micron and larger, 6 micron and larger and 14 micron and larger. When the count is done by optical microscope two size ranges are used – the 5 micron and larger and 15 micron and larger.

For example oil solid particle contamination can be described as ISO 20/18/16. This would mean there are between 5000 and 10000 particles larger than 4 micron per milliliter sample. Also there are between 1300 and 2500 particles larger than 6 micron in per milliliter of sample and between 320 to 640 particles larger than 14 micron. If a two scale number is used the contamination result could be 18/16. In this case there are between 1300 and 2500 particles larger than 5 micron in per milliliter of sample and between 320 to 640 particles larger than 15 micron.

How Contaminated Oil Destroys Equipment

Dirty oil spells rapid death for hydraulic machinery and lubricated equipment. Fine tolerance equipment can have clearances between parts of 5 to 10 microns (0.005 – 0.01 mm, 0.0002” – 0 0.0004”). Solid particles larger than the clearance gap will jam into the space. The solid particles will further be broken-up and mangled while ripping out more material from the surfaces. In equipment with larger tolerances the oil film between parts can get as thin as 3 – 5 micron. Solid particles larger than the oil film will be broken up into smaller pieces and produce more solids contamination.

Figure No. 1 shows a shaft in a journal bearing lubricated by oil. In the drawing the solid particles are larger than the oil film thickness and when they enter the bearing pressure zone at the bottom of the shaft they will tear into the metal, be broken up and make more particles that cause further wear.

Solids suspended in oil are like grinding paste. They scour and gouge surfaces; block oil passages and makes the oil more viscous. The longer the oil is left dirty the faster the rate of failure. Even expensive synthetic oil is of no use if it is contaminated by solid particles. Though synthetic oil has better high temperature and surface tension characteristics than mineral oil all advantages are lost if the synthetic oil is so contaminated that it is destroying the machine. The only solution is to keep the oil clean by filtration.

Figure No. 1 Solid Particles in Bearing Oil Film

Oil Analysis — Measuring Contamination

Oil samples can be taken and analysed in a laboratory. The analysis can measure a large range of parameters and factors that influence oil quality. Typically these include tests that quantify:

  • The number and size of particles.
  • The types and quantity of contaminants present.
  • The condition of the additives in the oil.
  • Changes to oil chemistry caused by the working environment. The amount of water present.
  • The oil’s viscosity (slipperiness).

It is not necessary to do all tests on all oils in all situations.  The selection of the type of analysis depends on the oil and where it is used. The oil used in combustion engines, gearboxes, hydraulic systems and gas turbines is not the same and the conditions under which it operates are different in each situation. For example soot would be present in internal combustion engines but it would not be present in gearboxes. There is no value in paying money to measure the amount of soot in a gearbox. But the amount of soot in a diesel engine’s oil is of critical importance.

Testing laboratories are required to follow internationally recognised procedures when measuring oil contamination. Equipment used to measure contaminants is also to be calibrated to recognised international standards. However, just as there are clean and dirty maintenance shops, there are clean and dirty laboratories. Results from laboratories without good calibration procedures and sample hygiene practices or from people that don’t fully understand the equipment and procedures should not be trusted.

Not all solid particle counting laboratory equipment can count particles down to very fine sizes. Results from these laboratories would give false figures showing less contamination at low micron sizes than was actually present. Some laboratories use equipment and methods that do not count particles larger than 100 micron (0.004”). Results from these laboratories would show incorrect large particle counts. In future these large particles would be smashed-up and broken down and the resulting smaller particles would quickly contaminate the oil.

If the sample itself is too heavily contaminated then optical counting methods cannot be used because the light emitted by the analyser will not pass through the sample in the same way the equipment was calibrated to receive. Optical counters can mistakenly count water droplets as solid particles. At times it can be necessary to confirm laboratory results by alternate means to prove the results are reliable.

Sampling Cleanliness

The method and cleanliness by which an oil sample is taken has a critical effect on the accuracy of the laboratory results. If the sample is falsely contaminated by mistakenly taking it from the wrong point or in the wrong way, or if the sample taking equipment or method introduce contaminants, then false contamination levels will be reported.

A good sample is one that is cleanly taken from the circulating oil flow. The proper sample taking method and procedure should be agreed with the laboratory and if necessary the laboratory should be asked to provide training for the sample takers.

How Clean Should Oil Be?

Many original equipment manufacturers have accepted the indisputable evidence from numerous field and laboratory trials that oil cleanliness has a major effect on wear within their equipment. Some of them are now specifying how clean must be the oil used in their equipment if warranty claims are to be honoured. For example Caterpillar specify new oil to have a particle count of ISO 16/13. If new oil is above this level of contamination they will not warranty their equipment. When new oil from a leading international oil manufacturer was tested before putting it into new Caterpillar equipment the solid particle contamination was found to be 17/14. This was new oil from a never previously opened container. In this case the new oil had to be further filtered to bring it to below the required specification.

Table No. 2 is a list the recommended target oil contamination levels for close tolerance equipment from a survey of hydraulic oil equipment and oil filter manufacturers.

Component

page4image45664.png page4image45664.png

< 3000 psi page5image39728.png

> 3000 psi

Fixed displacement pumps
page4image45664.png page4image45664.png

Vane

17/14 16/13
page4image45664.png page4image45664.png

Gear

page4image45664.png page4image45664.png

17/15 16/13
Piston

page4image45664.png page4image45664.png

16/14 15/13
Variable displacement pumps
page4image45664.png page4image45664.png

Vane

page4image45664.png page4image45664.png

15/13 –
Piston

page4image45664.png page4image45664.png

15/13 14/12
Valves
page4image45664.png page4image45664.png

Directional

18/15 17/14
page4image45664.png page4image45664.png

Proportional

16/13 15/12
page4image45664.png page4image45664.png page4image90840.png

Servo

14/11 page4image90840.png

13/1

Table No. 2 Recommended Target Oil Contamination Levels

Oil Filtration

If you want extremely low wear rates and long equipment life the evidence indicates that oil needs to be filtered down to sub 5 micron size and preferably down to one micron size. Care needs to be taken that the filter does also not remove any solid additives, such as graphite, in the oil. Additives dissolved in the oil will not be removed unless the additive is attached to a solid particle.

Oil filtration can be done under full oil flow or with by-pass flow or offline when the machine is not operating. There are several filter types such as pleated paper and wrapped fibre cord. In all cases the filter must capture a large proportion of greater than 5-micron particles if it is to clean the oil.

Filter performance

The correct way to measure filter performance is by use of the Beta Rating. It is a ratio that measures the number of particles entering a filter to the number leaving the filter. It is an accurate way to measure true in-service performance. Nominal filter micron size ratings from manufacturers are arbitrary and so meaningless. And absolute filter micron size ratings are unreliable since the softer particles in the oil can be squeezed through the filter and reappear as contaminants.

Numerous tests on a range of hydraulic (e.g. piston pump) and oil lubricated equipment (e.g. truck engine) have been conducted that confirmed filtering oil and removing particles deliver exceptionally long equipment life. The cost of suitable filtration systems is not expensive. For expensive hydraulic and oil lubricated equipment the cost of filtration is easily and quickly returned by the large gain in equipment working life and reliability.

Mike Sondalini in collaboration with Don Irvine of Donamar Filters. Data supplied by Donamar Filters

References:

  • Leonard Bensch, Pall Corporation ‘How the new ISO particle count
    standard will affect you.’
  • Paul W Michael, Benz Oil, Tom S Wanke, Fluid Power Institute,
    ‘Surgically clean hydraulic oil – a case study.’
  • International Standard ISO 4406-1999, Hydraulic fluid power – Fluids
    – Method of coding the level of contamination by solid particles.
  • James C. Fitch, Handbook of case studies on contamination control.
    (1991)

 

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If you found this interesting, you may like the ebook Process Control Essentials.

Filed Under: Articles, on Maintenance Reliability, Plant Maintenance

About Mike Sondalini

In engineering and maintenance since 1974, Mike’s career extends across original equipment manufacturing, beverage processing and packaging, steel fabrication, chemical processing and manufacturing, quality management, project management, enterprise asset management, plant and equipment maintenance, and maintenance training. His specialty is helping companies build highly effective operational risk management processes, develop enterprise asset management systems for ultra-high reliable assets, and instil the precision maintenance skills needed for world class equipment reliability.

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