[0001] This invention relates to the lubrication of direct engine injection (e.g. fuel-stratified)
combustion engines.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
[0002] Direct injection engines are those in which fuel is injected inside the cylinders
of the engine, thereby enabling the amount of fuel burned and the timing of injection
to be controlled precisely. A problem with such engines is that deposits tend to build
up on the intake valves to unacceptable levels thereby interfering with the closing,
motion and sealing of the valves. The efficiency of the engine is thus reduced and
maximum power is limited. This is particularly evident in those engines utilising
closed crankcase ventilation.
[0003] WO2004/094573 A1 describes a way of addressing the above-described problem of intake valve deposits
by employing a lubricating oil composition comprising a base oil mixture, the base
oil mixture comprising (i) a Group III oil, a Group IV oil, or a mixture thereof,
in combination with (ii) a synthetic ester oil, the weight ratio of (i) to (ii) being
from about 0.2:1 to about 6:1. It is to be noted that, in the examples of the aforesaid
patent specification, each of the lubricating oil compositions contains a friction
modifier.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0004] The present invention addresses the above problem in an alternative way: a lubricating
oil composition is employed that is substantially free of any ashless organic friction
modifier and that comprises a base oil of low Noack volatility.
[0005] Thus, in a first aspect, this invention comprises a method of reducing intake valve
deposits in a direct injection internal combustion engine which comprises lubricating
the engine with a lubricating oil composition that is substantially free of any ashless
organic friction modifier and that comprises a major amount of base oil of lubricating
viscosity having a Noack volatility of less than 12 mass %. Preferably, the engine
has closed crankcase ventilation.
[0006] In a second aspect, the invention comprises the use of a major amount of base oil
of lubricating viscosity and having a Noack volatility of less than 12 mass % in a
lubricating oil composition that is substantially free of any ashless organic friction
modifier to reduce intake valve deposits in a direct injection internal combustion
engine lubricated by the composition.
[0007] In this specification, the following words and expressions, if and when used, have
the meanings ascribed below:
"active ingredient" or "(a.i.)" refers to additive material that is not diluent or
solvent;
"comprising" or any cognate word specifies the presence of stated features, steps,
or integers or components, but does not preclude the presence or addition of one or
more other features, steps, integers, components or groups thereof; the expressions
"consists of" or "consists essentially of" or cognates may be embraced within "comprises"
or cognates, wherein "consists essentially of" permits inclusion of substances not
materially affecting the characteristics of the composition to which it applies;
"major amount" means in excess of 50 mass % of a composition;
"minor amount" means less than 50 mass % of a composition;
"TBN" means total base number as measured by ASTM D2896.
[0008] Furthermore in this specification:
"phosphorus content" is as measured by ASTM D5185;
"sulphated ash content" is as measured by ASTM D874;
"sulphur content" is as measured by ASTM D2622;
"KV100" means kinematic viscosity at 100°C as measured by ASTM D445.
[0009] Also, it will be understood that various components used, essential as well as optimal
and customary, may react under conditions of formulation, storage or use and that
the invention also provides the product obtainable or obtained as a result of any
such reaction.
[0010] Further, it is understood that any upper and lower quantity, range and ratio limits
set forth herein may be independently combined.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0011] The features of the invention relating, where appropriate, to each and all aspects
of the invention, will now be described in more detail as follows:
ENGINE
[0012] The invention is applicable to a range of direct injection internal combustion engines
such as compression-ignited and spark-ignited two- or four-cylinder reciprocating
engines. Examples include engines for passenger cars, light commercial vehicles and
heavy duty on-highway trucks; engines for aviation, power-generation, locomotive and
marine equipment; and heavy duty off-highway engines such as may be used for agriculture,
construction and mixing.
LUBRICATING OIL COMPOSITION
[0013] As stated above, the composition is substantially free of any ashless organic friction
modifier. "Substantially free" means that the composition contains no more than adventitious
or trace amounts of such friction modifier and that are insufficient to exercise friction
modification in operation of composition. For example, the amount of ashless friction
modifier is zero or is so low that its presence has no significant or practical effect
on the performance of the composition. The composition may contain less than 0.1,
suitably less than 0.01, such as 0 to 0.0075, mass %. Most preferably, the composition
contains none, i.e. 0 mass %, of such friction modifier.
[0014] Friction modification means the lowering of coefficients of friction by means of
a boundary lubricant additive, a friction modifier, hence improving fuel economy.
[0015] By "ashless" in respect of the friction modifier is meant a non-metallic organic
material that forms substantially no ash on combustion. It is to be contrasted with
metal-containing, and hence ash-forming, materials.
[0016] Examples of ashless organic friction modifiers in the sense of this invention include
the following:
- (1) ashless (metal-free), nitrogen-free organic friction modifiers that include esters
formed by reacting carboxylic acids and anhydrides with alkanols. Such friction modifiers
include aliphatic carboxylic acids, aliphatic carboxylic esters of polyols, such as
glycerol esters of fatty acids, for example, glycerol oleate, boric esters of glycerol
fatty acid monoesters, esters of long chain polycarboxylic acids with diols, for example,
the butane diol ester of a dimerized unsaturated fatty acid, aliphatic phosphonates,
aliphatic phosphates, aliphatic thiophosphates, aliphatic thiophosphonates, aliphatic
thiophosphates and oxazoline compounds. The aliphatic group usually contains at least
eight carbon atoms so as to render the compound oil soluble. Esters of carboxylic
acids and anhydrides with alkanols are described in US Patent No. 4,702,850. Examples of other conventional organic friction modifiers are described by M. Belzer in the "Journal of Tribology" (1992), Vol. 114, pp. 675-682 and M. Belzer and S. Jahanmir in "Lubrication Science" (1988), Vol. 1, pp. 3-26.
- (2) ashless aminic friction modifiers that include oil-soluble aliphatic amines, alkoxylated
mono- and di-amines and aliphatic fatty acids amindes. One common class of such metal-free,
nitrogen-containing friction modifier comprises ethoxylated amines. These amines may,
for example, be in the form of an adduct or reaction product with a boron compound
such as a boric oxide, boron halide, metaborate, boric acid or a mono-, di- or tri-alkyl
borate. Other aminic friction modifiers include alkoxylated alkyl-substituted mono-amines,
diamines and alkyl ether amines, for example, ethoxylated tallow amine and ethoxylated
tallow ether amine and aliphatic carboxylic ester-amides. Examples of fatty acid esters
and amides as friction modifiers are described in US Patent No. 3,933,659.
[0017] As stated above, the base oil in the composition has a Noack volatility of less than
12 mass %. Noack volatility is measured according to the procedure of ASTM D5800 and
is the evaporative loss of an oil, reported in mass %, after one hour at 250°C.
[0018] Preferably, the Noack volatility of the base oil is less than 12, more preferably
in the range of 4 to 11, mass %.
[0019] Also, it is preferred that the Noack volatility of the composition is less than 10,
preferably less than 9, mass %.
[0020] Further, the invention may be employed using compositions having low levels of one
or more of sulfated ash, phosphorus and sulfur. Thus, the composition may, for example,
contain up to 1.2, preferably up to 1.0, more preferably up to 1.0, mass % of sulfated
ash, based on the total mass of the composition. It may, for example, contain up to
0.1, preferably up to 0.08, more preferably up to 0.06, mass % of phosphorus, expressed
as atoms of phosphorus, based on the total mass of the composition. It may, for example,
contain up to 0.4, preferably up to 0.2, mass % of sulfur expressed as atoms of sulfur,
based on the total mass of the composition.
[0021] Furthermore, the composition may have a 0W-X, 5W-X, 15W-X or 20W-X viscosity grade
according to the SAE J300 classification, where X is 20, 30, 40 or 50.
BASE OIL
[0022] The base oil, sometime referred to as basestock, is the primary liquid constituent
of the composition into which additives and possibly other oils are blended. It has
been discussed above in terms of its Noack volatility. The following further comments
are now made.
[0023] A base oil may be selected from natural (vegetable, animal or mineral) and synthetic
lubricating oils and mixtures thereof. It may range in viscosity from light distillate
mineral oils to heavy lubricating oils such as gas engine oil, mineral lubricating
oil, motor vehicle oil and heavy duty diesel oil. Generally the viscosity of the oil
ranges from 2 to 30, especially 5 to 20, mm
2s
-1 at 100°C.
[0024] Natural oils include animal and vegetable oils (e.g. castor and lard oil), liquid
petroleum oils and hydrorefined, solvent-treated mineral lubricating oils of the paraffinic,
naphthenic and mixed paraffinic-naphthenic types. Oils of lubricating viscosity derived
from coal or shale are also useful base oils.
[0025] Synthetic lubricating oils include hydrocarbon oils such as polymerized and interpolymerized
olefins (e.g. polybutylenes, polypropylenes, propylene-isobutylene copolymers, chlorinated
polybutylenes, poly (1-hexenes), poly (1-octenes), poly (1-decenes)); alkylbenzenes
(e.g. dodecylbenzenes, tetradecylbenzenes, dinonylbenzenes, di (2-ethylhexyl)benzenes);
polyphenols (e.g. biphenyls, terphenyls, alkylated polyphenols); and alkylated diphenyl
ethers and alkylated diphenyl sulfides and derivatives, analogues and homologues thereof.
[0026] Another suitable class of synthetic lubricating oils comprises the esters of dicarboxylic
acids (e.g. phthalic acid, succinic acid, alkyl succinic acids and alkenyl succinic
acids, maleic acid, azelaic acid, suberic acid, sebasic acid, fumaric acid, adipic
acid, linoleic acid dimer, malonic acid, alkylmalonic acids, alkenyl malonic acids)
with a variety of alcohols (e.g. butyl alcohol, hexyl alcohol, dodecyl alcohol, 2-ethylhexyl
alcohol, ethylene glycol, diethylene glycol monoether, propylene glycol). Specific
examples of these esters include dibutyl adipate, di(2-ethylhexyl) sebacate, di-n-hexyl
fumarate, dioctyl sebacate, diisooctyl azelate, diisodecyl azelate, dioctyl phthalate,
didecyl phthalate, dieicosyl sebacate, the 2-ethylhexyl diester of linoleic acid dimer,
and the complex ester formed by reacting one mole of sebacic acid with two moles of
tetraethylene glycol and two moles of 2-ethylhexanoic acid.
[0027] Esters useful as synthetic oils also include those made from C
5 to C
12 monocarboxylic acids and polyols, and polyol ethers such as neopentyl glycol, trimethylolpropane,
pentaerythritol, dipentaerythritol and tripentaerythritol.
[0028] Preferably, the base oil is not a Fischer-Tropsch derived base oil.
[0029] Unrefined, refined and re-refined oils can be used in the compositions of the present
invention. Unrefined oils are those obtained directly from a natural or synthetic
source without further purification treatment. For example, a shale oil obtained directly
from retorting operations, a petroleum oil obtained directly from distillation or
ester oil obtained directly from an esterification process and used without further
treatment would be unrefined oil. Refined oils are similar to the unrefined oils except
they have been further treated in one or more purification steps to improve one or
more properties. Many such purification techniques, such as distillation, solvent
extraction, acid or base extraction, filtration and percolation are known to those
skilled in the art. Re-refined oils are obtained by processes similar to those used
to obtain refined oils applied to refined oils which have been already used in service.
Such re-refined oils are also known as reclaimed or reprocessed oils and often are
additionally processed by techniques for approval of spent additive and oil breakdown
products.
[0030] Other examples of base oil are gas-to liquid ("GTL") base oils, i.e. the base oil
may be an oil derived from Fischer-Tropsch-synthesised hydrocarbons made from synthesis
gas containing hydrogen and carbon monoxide using a Fischer-Tropsch catalyst. These
hydrocarbons typically require further processing in order to be useful as a base
oil. For example, they may, by methods known in the art, be hydroisomerized; hydrocracked
and hydroisomerized; dewaxed; or hydroisomerized and dewaxed.
[0031] Base oil may be categorised in Groups 1 to V according to the API EOLCS 1509 definition.
[0032] The base oil of lubricating viscosity is provided in a major amount, in combination
with a minor amount of additives such as described hereinafter, constituting the composition.
This preparation may be accomplished by adding the additive directly to the oil or
by adding it in the form of a concentrate thereof to disperse or dissolve the additive.
Additives may be added to the base oil by any method known to those skilled in the
art, either prior to, contemporaneously with, or subsequent to, addition of other
additives. The composition of the invention suitably has a TBN of 13 or less. For
example, it is less than 10, such as in the range of 4 to 9.
[0033] The terms "oil-soluble" or "dispersible", or cognate terms, used herein do not necessarily
indicate that the compounds or additives are soluble, dissolvable, miscible, or are
capable or being suspended in the oil in all proportions. They do mean, however, that
they are, for instance, soluble or stably dispersible in oil to an extent sufficient
to exert their intended effect in the environment in which the oil is employed. Moreover,
the additional incorporation of other additives may also permit incorporation of higher
levels of a particular additive, if desired.
ADDITIVES
[0034] The composition includes, as indicated above, one or more additives to provide certain
performance characteristics. As examples there may be mentioned the following, which
are known in the art:
[0035] Dispersants, including ashless dispersants, whose primary function is to hold solid
and liquid contaminants in suspension.
[0036] Detergents in the form of metal salts of acidic organic compounds one of whose functions
to reduce piston deposits and which normally have acid-neutralising properties.
[0037] Anti-oxidants, or oxidation inhibitors, for example in the form of aromatic amines
or hindered phenols.
[0038] Anti-wear agents such as metal (e.g. Zn) salts of dihydrocarbyl dithiophosphates.
[0039] Metal-containing friction modifiers such as molybdenum compounds. (Preferably, these
are absent).
[0040] Other additives may include one or more of rust and corrosion inhibitors, pour point
depressants, anti-foaming agents, emulsifiers and demulsifiers, and viscosity modifiers.
[0041] The individual additives may be incorporated into the base oil in any convenient
way. Thus, each of the additive components can be added directly to the base oil by
dispersing or dissolving it in the base oil at the desired level of concentration.
Such blending may occur at ambient temperature or at an elevated temperature.
[0042] Preferably, all the additives except for the viscosity modifier and the pour point
depressant are blended into a concentrate or additive package (as mentioned above),
that is subsequently blended into base oil to make the finished lubricating oil composition.
The concentrate will typically be formulated to contain the additive(s) in proper
amounts to provide the desired concentration in the final formulation when the concentrate
is combined with a predetermined amount of a base oil.
[0043] The concentrate is preferably made in accordance with the method described in
US Patent 4,938,880. That patent describes making a pre-mix of ashless dispersant and metal detergents
that is pre-blended at a temperature of at least about 100°C. Thereafter, the pre-mix
is cooled to at least 85°C and the additional components are added.
[0044] The final crankcase lubricating oil formulation may employ from 2 to 20, preferably
4 to 18, and most preferably 5 to 17, mass % of the concentrate or additive package,
the remainder being base oil.
EXAMPLES
[0045] The invention will now be described in the following examples which are not intended
to limit the scope of the claims hereof.
[0046] Four 5W-30 crankcase lubricating oil compositions were prepared. Each composition
contained one or more dispersants, metal detergents, anti-wear agents, anti-oxidants
and viscosity modifiers. Two of the compositions, being examples of the invention
(Examples 1 and 2), were free of any ashless, organic friction modifier. The other
two compositions, being reference examples for comparison purposes (Examples A and
B), contained 0.2 mass % of glycerol monooleate friction modifier and 0.1 mass % of
oleamide friction modifier. The base oil of each composition was blended to generate
Noack volatilities stated in the table below.
[0047] Each composition had comparable measured properties, e.g. P(0.06 mass %), sulphated
ash (0.60 mass %), TBN (6) and KV100 (12.2 mm
2s-
1), with the exception of Noack volatility.
[0048] Each composition was tested using the VW FSI intake valve deposit test using a 1.4L
77KW direct injection gasoline engine with closed crankcase ventilation. The inlet
valves were weighed before the test and after the test to determine the weight of
deposit formed. The results are expressed in the table below.
Example |
Noack Volatility (mass %) |
Ratio Deposits/maximum limit |
(Calculated) Base Oil |
(Measured) Composition |
1 |
10.6 |
7.8 |
0.974 |
2 |
10.1 |
7.8 |
0.984 |
A |
10.1 |
8.1 |
1.468 |
B |
12.2 |
10.7 |
2.238 |
[0049] Footnote - The results shown are the ratios of the measured weights of the intake valve deposits
to the maximum limit of intake value deposits permitted by the test. Thus, a lower
value indicates a better result; a value below one indicates performance within the
permitted limit and a value greater than one indicates performance outside the permitted
limit.
[0050] Comparing the results of Examples 1 and 2 together, with the result of Example A
shows that, at constant Noack volatility, the presence of the ashless organic friction
modifiers in A has given rise to sufficient deterioration in performance in the test.
[0051] Comparing the results of Examples A and B shows that, at the same level of ashless
organic friction modifiers, increase in Noack volatility in moving from Example A
to Example B has given rise to deterioration in performance.
1. A method of reducing intake valve deposits in a direct injection internal combustion
engine which comprises lubricating the engine with a lubricating oil composition that
is substantially free of any ashless organic friction modifier and that comprises
a major amount of base oil of lubricating viscosity having a Noack volatility of less
than 12 mass %.
2. A method as claimed in claim 1 wherein the Noack volatility is less than 11 mass %.
3. A method as claimed in claim 1 or claim 2 wherein the Noack volatility is in the range
of 4 to 11 mass %.
4. A method as claimed in any of claims 1 to 3 wherein the lubricating oil composition
contains up to 0.1, preferably up to 0.08, more preferably up to 0.06, mass % of phosphorus,
expressed as atoms of phosphorus.
5. A method as claimed in any of claims 1 to 4 wherein the lubricating oil composition
contains up to 1.2, preferably up to 1.0, more preferably up to 0.8, mass % of sulphated
ash.
6. A method as claimed in any of claims 1 to 5 wherein the lubricating oil composition
contains up to 0.4, preferably up to 0.2, mass % of sulfur, expressed as atoms of
sulfur.
7. A method as claimed in any of claims 1 to 6 wherein the lubricating oil composition
has a 0W-X, 5W-X, 15W-X or 20W-X viscosity grade according to the SAE J300 classification,
wherein X is 20, 30, 40 or 50.
8. The use of a major amount of a base oil of lubricating viscosity and having a Noack
volatility of less than 12 mass % in a lubricating oil composition that is substantially
free of any ashless organic friction modifier to reduce intake valve deposits in a
direct injection internal combustion engine lubricated by the composition.