Analysis of lubricant additive elements under ambient air using EDXRF
Applications | 2017 | Thermo Fisher ScientificInstrumentation
High-performance lubricants rely on organometallic additives to minimize friction, wear and oxidation in precision machinery. Accurate and rapid quantification of metallic additive elements at ppm to percent levels is essential for quality control and blending of these formulations.
The application note examines the capability of energy-dispersive X-ray fluorescence (EDXRF) using the ARL QUANT’X spectrometer to quantify key lubricant additives—phosphorus, calcium, zinc and barium—directly under ambient air. The primary goals are to establish calibration performance, limits of detection (LoD) and measurement repeatability.
The procedure involves transferring 3 g of lubricant into a polypropylene-film-sealed cup. Four excitation filter conditions (Low Za, Low Zb, Mid Za, Mid Zc) were optimized for each element and measured under air for 100 s live time. Calibration used standards at 23, 45 and 90 ppm prepared from a 900 ppm organometallic mix diluted in blank oil.
This ambient-air EDXRF method enables simultaneous, multi-element analysis without vacuum or helium, reducing operational costs. Fast measurement (100 s per filter) and minimal sample preparation support high-throughput lubricant QC in research, production and field laboratories.
Ongoing advances in detector technology and filter design promise lower detection limits and expanded element coverage. Integration with automated sample handling and real-time process monitoring could further accelerate lubricant formulation and on-site diagnostics. Combining EDXRF with complementary techniques (e.g., ICP-MS) may deliver comprehensive fingerprinting of emerging additive chemistries.
The ARL QUANT’X spectrometer provides a robust, cost-effective platform for determining critical metal additives in lubricants under ambient air. Calibration linearity, low detection limits and strong repeatability confirm its suitability for routine quality control and R&D applications.
No external literature references were cited in the original application note.
X-ray
IndustriesEnergy & Chemicals
ManufacturerThermo Fisher Scientific
Summary
Importance of the Topic
High-performance lubricants rely on organometallic additives to minimize friction, wear and oxidation in precision machinery. Accurate and rapid quantification of metallic additive elements at ppm to percent levels is essential for quality control and blending of these formulations.
Study Objectives and Overview
The application note examines the capability of energy-dispersive X-ray fluorescence (EDXRF) using the ARL QUANT’X spectrometer to quantify key lubricant additives—phosphorus, calcium, zinc and barium—directly under ambient air. The primary goals are to establish calibration performance, limits of detection (LoD) and measurement repeatability.
Methodology and Instrumentation
The procedure involves transferring 3 g of lubricant into a polypropylene-film-sealed cup. Four excitation filter conditions (Low Za, Low Zb, Mid Za, Mid Zc) were optimized for each element and measured under air for 100 s live time. Calibration used standards at 23, 45 and 90 ppm prepared from a 900 ppm organometallic mix diluted in blank oil.
Instrument Used
- EDXRF spectrometer: ARL QUANT’X
- 50 kV, 50 W silver-target X-ray tube
- Silicon drift detector (SDD)
- Nine primary filters optimized for F–Am peak-to-background ratios
Main Results and Discussion
- Calibration curves were linear from 0 to 90 ppm for all analytes, with RMSE values of 1.2 ppm (P), 0.14 ppm (Ca), 0.27 ppm (Zn) and 1.3 ppm (Ba).
- Limits of detection (3×σ of blank) were determined as 11 ppm (P), 0.9 ppm (Ca), 0.2 ppm (Zn) and 3 ppm (Ba).
- Repeatability at 23 ppm yielded relative errors below 7%; Zn and Ca showed <1.5% RSD, Ba ~3.7% and P ~6.9% due to proximity to its LoD.
Benefits and Practical Applications
This ambient-air EDXRF method enables simultaneous, multi-element analysis without vacuum or helium, reducing operational costs. Fast measurement (100 s per filter) and minimal sample preparation support high-throughput lubricant QC in research, production and field laboratories.
Future Trends and Applications
Ongoing advances in detector technology and filter design promise lower detection limits and expanded element coverage. Integration with automated sample handling and real-time process monitoring could further accelerate lubricant formulation and on-site diagnostics. Combining EDXRF with complementary techniques (e.g., ICP-MS) may deliver comprehensive fingerprinting of emerging additive chemistries.
Conclusion
The ARL QUANT’X spectrometer provides a robust, cost-effective platform for determining critical metal additives in lubricants under ambient air. Calibration linearity, low detection limits and strong repeatability confirm its suitability for routine quality control and R&D applications.
References
No external literature references were cited in the original application note.
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