Usage And Synthesis
Mineral oils include lubricant base oils and products derived from them. The physical properties of lubricant oils vary widely, but generally are defined by crude oil source, carbon number distribution, boiling range, and viscosity. Mineral oils, which are refined from petroleum crude oils, are complex mixtures of straight- and branchedchain paraffinic, naphthenic, and aromatic hydrocarbons with 15 or more carbons and boiling points in the range of 300°C to 600°C; boiling points of up to 815°C have been reported for heavier oils. The viscosity of lubricant oils is described as “light” or “heavy” depending upon whether the maximum viscosity at 37.8°C is less than or equal to 20.5 mm2/sec (centistokes). The density of mineral oils at 15°C ranges from 0.820 kg/L for light paraffinic base and process oils to just over 1.0 kg/L for high aromatic base and process oils. The complete description of a mineral oil must include the nature of the final treatment step, which determines whether the material is mildly or severely treated during the refining process. Medicinal white mineral oils, which are pharmaceutical- and food-grade materials, are highly refined and free of all aromatic and unsaturated compounds. As highly refined oils, these products are not covered under this listing (IARC 1984).
Mineral oils are insoluble in water and alcohol, but soluble in benzene, chloroform, ether, carbon disulfide, and petroleum ether. Paraffinic crude oils are characterized by high wax content, high natural viscosity index (the rate of change of viscosity over a given temperature range), and relatively low aromatic hydrocarbon content. Naphthenic crude oils are generally low in wax content and relatively high in cycloparaffins and aromatic hydrocarbons. All crude oils contain some polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, and the proportions and types of these compounds in finished base oils are determined primarily by the refining processes (IARC 1984). Mineral oils generally do not present a fire hazard and must be preheated before ignition will occur (HSDB 2009).
Mineral oils are insoluble in water and alcohol, but soluble in benzene, chloroform, ether, carbon disulfide, and petroleum ether. Paraffinic crude oils are characterized by high wax content, high natural viscosity index (the rate of change of viscosity over a given temperature range), and relatively low aromatic hydrocarbon content. Naphthenic crude oils are generally low in wax content and relatively high in cycloparaffins and aromatic hydrocarbons. All crude oils contain some polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, and the proportions and types of these compounds in finished base oils are determined primarily by the refining processes (IARC 1984). Mineral oils generally do not present a fire hazard and must be preheated before ignition will occur (HSDB 2009).
Mineral oils are used primarily as lubricant base oils to produce further refined oil products, including engine oils, automotive and industrial gear oils, transmission fluids, hydraulic fluids, circulating and hydraulic oils, bearing oils, machine oils, machine-tool oils, compressor and refrigerator oils, steam-engine oils, textile machine oils, air-tool oils, metalworking oils (cutting oils, roll oils, can-forming oils, and drawing oils), rust-preventative oils, heat-treating oils, transformer oils, greases, medicinal and technical-grade white oils, and processing oils (product extenders, processing aids, carriers and diluents, water repellents, surface-active agents, batching oils, moldrelease oils, and wash oils). These oils are used in manufacturing (78.5% of the oils produced), mining (5.0%), construction (1.8%), and miscellaneous industries (14.7%). About 57% of the lubricating oils produced are used by the automotive industry, and the remaining 43% by other industries. In the automotive industry, lubricating oils are used as multigrade engine oils (23% of the lubricating oils produced), monograde engine oils (22%), transmission and hydraulic fluids (8%), gear oils (2%), and aviation oils (1%). In other industries, lubricating oils are used as general industrial diesel engine oils (19%), process oils (13%), metalworking oils (4%), railroad diesel engine oils (3%), and marine diesel engine oils (2%) (IARC 1984).
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