Stabilization of Vegetable Oil-Based Quenchants to Thermal-Oxidative Degradation: Part I - Effect of Antioxidants on Quenching Performance

Wednesday, October 21, 2015: 2:05 PM
250C (COBO Center)
Dr. Eder C.A. Simencio , University of Sao Paulo, São Carlos-SP, Brazil
Dr. Rosa L. Simencio Otero , University of Sao Paulo, São Carlos-SP, Brazil
Dr. Lauralice Canale , University of Sao Paulo, São Carlos-SP, Brazil
Dr. George Totten , G.E. Totten & Associates LLC, Seattle, WA
Although petroleum oils continue to be the dominant type of basestock for the formulation of vaporizable quenchants, there is increasing pressure to identify an alternative basestock to address the limitations to their continued use because they are not a renewable basestock and they possess generally poor toxicity and biodegradability properties. Currently the most often cited alternative basestocks are those based on seed oils since they are renewable and usually non-toxic but especially because they are typically readily biodegradable. However, they suffer a critically important deficiency in that they are also typically much less stable to thermal-oxidative degradation than petroleum oils. There have been various reports discussing the effect of triglyceride (vegetable oil) structure on thermal-oxidative performance and on the use of oxidation inhibitors to provide the necessary stabilization.
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