Fuel-Lubricant Interactions: Critical Review of Recent Work

A critical review of recent work on fuel lubricant interactions is undertaken. The work focusses on liquid fuels used in diesel and gasoline vehicles. The amount of fuel that contaminates the lubricant depends on driving conditions, engine design, fuel type, and lubricant type. When fuel contaminate...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Robert Ian Taylor
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-09-01
Series:Lubricants
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2075-4442/9/9/92
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spelling doaj-b2c61cc85ecf4a75b3b75118085e643f2021-09-26T00:34:56ZengMDPI AGLubricants2075-44422021-09-019929210.3390/lubricants9090092Fuel-Lubricant Interactions: Critical Review of Recent WorkRobert Ian Taylor0School of Engineering, University of Central Lancashire, Preston PR1 2HE, UKA critical review of recent work on fuel lubricant interactions is undertaken. The work focusses on liquid fuels used in diesel and gasoline vehicles. The amount of fuel that contaminates the lubricant depends on driving conditions, engine design, fuel type, and lubricant type. When fuel contaminates a lubricant, the viscosity of the lubricant will change (it will usually decrease), the sump oil level may increase, there may be a tendency for more sludge formation, there may be an impact on friction and wear, and low speed pre-ignition could occur. The increased use of biofuels (particularly biodiesel) may require a reduction in oil drain intervals, and fuel borne additives could contaminate the lubricant. The move towards the active regeneration of particulate filters by delayed fuel post-injection and the move towards hybrid electric vehicles and vehicles equipped with stop-start systems will lead to increased fuel dilution. This will be of more concern in diesel engines, since significant fuel dilution could persist at sump oil temperatures in the range of 100–150 °C (whereas in gasoline engines the more volatile gasoline fuel will have substantially evaporated at these temperatures). It is anticipated that more research into fuel lubricant interactions, particularly for diesel engines, will be needed in the near future.https://www.mdpi.com/2075-4442/9/9/92fuellubricantfuel-lubricant interactionfuel dilutionbiofuelsfriction modifiers
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Robert Ian Taylor
spellingShingle Robert Ian Taylor
Fuel-Lubricant Interactions: Critical Review of Recent Work
Lubricants
fuel
lubricant
fuel-lubricant interaction
fuel dilution
biofuels
friction modifiers
author_facet Robert Ian Taylor
author_sort Robert Ian Taylor
title Fuel-Lubricant Interactions: Critical Review of Recent Work
title_short Fuel-Lubricant Interactions: Critical Review of Recent Work
title_full Fuel-Lubricant Interactions: Critical Review of Recent Work
title_fullStr Fuel-Lubricant Interactions: Critical Review of Recent Work
title_full_unstemmed Fuel-Lubricant Interactions: Critical Review of Recent Work
title_sort fuel-lubricant interactions: critical review of recent work
publisher MDPI AG
series Lubricants
issn 2075-4442
publishDate 2021-09-01
description A critical review of recent work on fuel lubricant interactions is undertaken. The work focusses on liquid fuels used in diesel and gasoline vehicles. The amount of fuel that contaminates the lubricant depends on driving conditions, engine design, fuel type, and lubricant type. When fuel contaminates a lubricant, the viscosity of the lubricant will change (it will usually decrease), the sump oil level may increase, there may be a tendency for more sludge formation, there may be an impact on friction and wear, and low speed pre-ignition could occur. The increased use of biofuels (particularly biodiesel) may require a reduction in oil drain intervals, and fuel borne additives could contaminate the lubricant. The move towards the active regeneration of particulate filters by delayed fuel post-injection and the move towards hybrid electric vehicles and vehicles equipped with stop-start systems will lead to increased fuel dilution. This will be of more concern in diesel engines, since significant fuel dilution could persist at sump oil temperatures in the range of 100–150 °C (whereas in gasoline engines the more volatile gasoline fuel will have substantially evaporated at these temperatures). It is anticipated that more research into fuel lubricant interactions, particularly for diesel engines, will be needed in the near future.
topic fuel
lubricant
fuel-lubricant interaction
fuel dilution
biofuels
friction modifiers
url https://www.mdpi.com/2075-4442/9/9/92
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