VEGETABLE OIL STRUCTURE AND ANTIOXIDANTS


Autoria(s): SOUZA, Ester Carvalho de; KOMATSU, Daniel; BELINATO, Gabriela; TOTTEN, George E.; CANALE, Lauraice de C. F.
Contribuinte(s)

UNIVERSIDADE DE SÃO PAULO

Data(s)

18/10/2012

18/10/2012

2010

Resumo

Five vegetable oils: canola, soybean, corn, cottonseed and sunflower oils were characterized with respect to their composition by gas chromatography and viscosity. The compositions of the vegetable oils suggest that they exhibit substantially different propensity for oxidation following the order of: canola < corn < cottonseed < sunflower approximate to soybean. Viscosities at 40 degrees C and 100 degrees C and the viscosity index (VI) values were determined for the vegetable oils and two petroleum oil quenchants: Microtemp 157 (a conventional slow oil) and Microtemp 153B (an accelerated or fast oil). The kinematic viscosities of the different vegetable and petroleum oils at 40 degrees C were similar. The VI values for the different vegetable oils were very close and varied between 209-220 and were all much higher than the VI values obtained for Microtemp 157 (96) and Microtemp 153B (121). These data indicate that the viscosity variations of these vegetable oils are substantially less sensitive to temperature variation than are the parafinic oil based Microtemp 157 and Microtemp 153B. Although these data suggest that any of the vegetable oils evaluated could be blended with minimal impact on viscosity, the oxidative stability would surely be substantially impacted. Cooling curve analysis was performed on these vegetable oils at 60 degrees C under non-agitated conditions. These results were compared with cooling curves obtained for Microtemp 157, a conventional, unaccelerated petroleum oil, and Microtemp 153B, an accelerated petroleum oil under the same conditions. The results showed that cooling profiles of the different vegetable oils were similar as expected from the VI values. However, no boiling was observed wit any of the vegetable oils and heat transfer occurs only by convection since there is no full-film boiling and nucleate boiling process as typically observed for petroleum oil quenchants, including those of this study. Therefore, high-temperature cooling is considerable faster for vegetable oils as a class. The cooling properties obtained suggest that vegetable oils would be especially suitable fur quenching low-hardenability steels such as carbon steels.

CAPES Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior

Identificador

TRANSACTIONS OF FAMENA, v.34, n.3, p.71-82, 2010

1333-1124

http://producao.usp.br/handle/BDPI/18022

http://apps.isiknowledge.com/InboundService.do?Func=Frame&product=WOS&action=retrieve&SrcApp=EndNote&UT=000283605600008&Init=Yes&SrcAuth=ResearchSoft&mode=FullRecord

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

UNIV ZAGREB FAC MECHANICAL ENGINEERING & NAVAL ARCHITECTURE

Relação

Transactions of Famena

Direitos

closedAccess

Copyright UNIV ZAGREB FAC MECHANICAL ENGINEERING & NAVAL ARCHITECTURE

Palavras-Chave #Quenchant #heat transfer #vegetable oil #cooling curve #PERFORMANCE #Engineering, Mechanical #Materials Science, Multidisciplinary
Tipo

article

original article

publishedVersion