The present invention provides a system and a method for the analysis and assessment of lubricant tribofilms.
The main function of an engine oil or lubricant formulation is to form a protective film that reduces friction and wear between moving parts. It also cools the engine by transferring the heat to other parts. In order to examine these protective films on the rubbing surfaces within internal combustion engines, and assess the effectiveness of a lubricant composition, a series of laboratory bench tests are generally carried out.
Tribofilms are formed by the chemical bonding of additives in the lubricant formulation with metal engine surfaces. Stronger and thicker tribofilms offer wear protection by preventing metal-to-metal contact. Analysis of tribofilms is therefore a useful tool in the assessment of lubricant formulations. A particular area of focus is in the development of engine oil formulations that exhibit enhanced wear protection, in light of the increased drive towards thinner (lower viscosity) engine oil formulations targeted at increased fuel economy and the vulnerability they create.
The wear protection of a lubricant formulation can be investigated at the vehicle level in an engine test or in a laboratory bench test using a tribometer. Tribometers offer custom, timely, cost-effective and rapid screening options to investigate and compare lubricants for wear protection. The mini-traction machine 3D spacer layer imaging (MTM 3D-SLIM) instrument manufactured by PCS Instruments is one such tribometer that is commonly used for wear investigation. The tests carried out using an MTM 3D-SLIM instrument involve rubbing two surfaces together in the presence of a lubricant and then analysing the tribofilm image.
The MTM 3D-SLIM instrument engages two contacting surfaces (a ball and a disc) in the presence of the lubricant under different user-specified speeds, temperatures, loads and motions. The tribofilms formed are captured in situ by an integrated optical interferometry camera as the experiment progresses. The images represent surface changes during the test and are helpful for understanding and comparing the wear protection benefits of different lubricant technologies.
The steps involved in analysing a lubricant formulation using an MTM 3D-SLIM instrument are illustrated in
At the end of the experiment, the tribofilm thickness can be calculated from the images using calibration software. These results can provide an assessment of how fast the protective films form and their thickness allowing benchmarking of the protection performance of premium lubricants.
An illustration of a typical MTM 3D-SLIM image is shown in
An improved and more accurate assessment of tribofilm, from images such as those produced by an MTM 3D SLIM tribometer, would be highly desirable in order to provide a more robust assessment of the anti-wear characteristics of a lubricant formulation.
The present invention provides a method for the analysis of a tribofilm, said process comprising:
The present invention also provides a method for the analysis of a tribofilm, said process comprising:
The present invention also provides a system for analysing a tribofilm, said system comprising:
In order to overcome the limitations of traditional thickness analysis and to derive maximum value from analysis of tribofilm images, the present inventors have developed a process in which an accurate and complete assessment of a tribofilm's thickness and coverage may be carried out.
In the process of the present invention, an image of a tribofilm is obtained. There is no limitation on how the tribofilm may be produced, but in a preferred embodiment, the tribofilm is produced and an image of it is obtained in an MTM 3D-SLIM tribometer instrument.
In said instrument, two surfaces (a ball and a disc) are contacted, in the presence of the lubricant, under different user-specified speeds, temperatures, loads and motions. The tribofilms formed are preferably captured in situ by an integrated optical interferometry camera as the experiment progresses. More preferably, a series of images may be captured over time as the experiment progresses.
The images are then coded using a MATLAB software algorithm capable of splitting the colours in the image into their RGB (Red Green Blue) components at the pixel level. This assigns an RGB colour value to each pixel within the image. Such an assignment of RGB colour value may be carried out using standard MATLAB software.
Each pixel is then assigned a tribofilm thickness value on the basis of the RGB colour of said pixel. In typical optical interferometry images of tribofilms, regions lacking a tribofilm are seen as blue and regions with a tribofilm are present in varying shades of brown. Thus, as the film thickness increases, there is a transition from blues to light browns and eventually darker shades of brown. Using known correlations, the RGB data points can, therefore, be converted to tribofilm thickness data points. Such correlations are readily available, for example those already used in an MTM 3D-SLIM instrument may be used. In a preferred embodiment of the invention, an algorithm is applied to the original data points in order to carry out this conversion.
Most tribofilm images suitable for analysis by this method contain an irrelevant background (see for example,
The remaining data points may then be analysed using one or more methods.
In its most basic form, the data points form an equivalent thickness map that may be plotted as a 2D contour map or a 3D surface plot. The thickness map may be used to generate statistical measurements, such as the dominant film thickness, that can be used to generate insights about lubricant and additive performance. Also, for example the minimum thickness and maximum thickness and their locations may be identified and this can be used to determine whether the tribofilm is thick enough to offer the desired protection.
One desirable lubricant quality is the formation of a tribofilm with uniform thickness across the coverage area. In a standard tribofilm image, a uniform film is seen as a single shade of brown with little or no variation. A non-uniform film has multiple shades of brown that appear as bands across the tribofilm.
In a preferred embodiment of the present invention, an algorithm is applied in order to split the image into its constituent bands. This algorithm groups data points with similar thickness values within the image based on the band colour intensity. The process then provides measures such as the number of bands, the band width and the intra- and inter-band thickness variations. A normalised uniformity index can then be produced on the basis of these measures. An ideal image would have one band spanning the entire tribofilm with little variation and a metric of unity. Any deviation from this ideal scenario is penalised, so real images end up with metric values of between zero and one.
To calculate this uniformity metric, one of the following equations may be applied:
In these equations, UM is the multiplicative uniformity metric, UA is the additive uniformity metric; wb is inter-band spacing; D is the diameter of image; NC is the number of bands; σintra is the intra band std. deviation; and σinter is the inter-band std. deviation. Such measurements would be readily carried out by the skilled person with a background in image processing and a knowledge of basic statistics.
An important feature of the present invention is that it enables comparison of multiple lubricant formulations based on the tribofilm thickness distribution, statistical measure and uniformity index. A pixel-by-pixel comparison of two tribofilm images can be made to compare thickness distributions.
An MTM 3D-SLIM experiment may be used to capture images at regular intervals to study the time evolution of the tribofilm during the experiment. The method of the present invention may therefore be run at each individual timestep to generate an understanding of how the thickness of the tribofilm maps and its metrics (e.g. maximum thickness, minimum thickness, dominant thickness, uniformity metric) vary as the experiment progresses. This data may be collated as a video depicting the evolution of the tribofilm along with the statistical measures and uniformity metrics.
Although the method of the present invention may be carried out by a single user, steps involving data processing may also be carried out in a data processing unit which is part of a distributed system, such as a cloud-based computing system. In this embodiment, the method of the invention involves the steps of:
The steps involving the analysis of a tribofilm according to the present invention are shown in
Selection of the circular image (8) from the original data set then allows for all data points for parts of the image where the thickness of the tribofilm is zero or near-zero to be excluded and a map of the thickness of the tribofilm (9) pixel by pixel to be produced.
An enlarged version of such a map (9) is shown in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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202041000266 | Jan 2020 | IN | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2020/087880 | 12/24/2020 | WO |