Originally Posted By: Gokhan
Originally Posted By: lubricatosaurus
Originally Posted By: Gokhan
This very interesting Chevron patent claims that GTL base stocks have a higher pressure - viscosity coefficient (PVC), ......
The Chevron patent didn't claim that at all.
"More particularly, the present invention employs base stocks exhibiting low temperature sensitivity of the Pressure- Viscosity-Coefficient (PVC) to obtain improved wear properties." from the patent indicates they only have observed a lack of sensitivity to temperature in their GTL basestocks, not that it has a higher PVC.
That's because PVC decreases with temperature. (See, for example,
this reference.) They are trying to find base stocks with higher PVC at higher temperatures so that they will have thicker EHL oil films at higher temperatures that various parts of the engine experience during normal or severe operation. By keeping the ratio of PVC100/PVC40 close to 1, they are ensuring that they have a small variation of PVC with temperature and have a high PVC at high temperatures.
It's like a "PVC index" analogous to the viscosity index. The latter ensures that the viscosity stays high and the oil-film thickness stays large when the temperature increases and the former ensures that the PVC stays high and the oil-film strength stays high when the temperature increases.
The following excerpt from the patent explains this more:
"[0008] The present lubricant composition provides greatly improved valve train wear control due to the selection of base stocks with specific temperature sensitivity characteristics. The base stocks of choice exhibit less temperature sensitivity of the Pressure-Viscosity- Coefficient (PVC) than conventionally used base stocks, thus minimizing the reduction of contact film thickness with increasing temperature, relative to 'typical' base oils. Such base stocks have been found to exhibit higher PVC at the temperature levels experienced in the valve train's wear contacts of an internal combustion engine. As a result of this higher PVC, these base stocks behave more solid-like under extremely high contact pressures, greater than 0.5 GPa. By measuring the PVC of a base oil at 40°C and 100°C, the temperature sensitivity of the PVC can be determined by the ratio of 40°C PVC/100°C PVC. As this ratio approaches 1.00, the base stock PVC is less sensitive to the temperature. Base stocks showing this behavior have been found to provide improved wear protection. Such base stocks surprisingly cover a broad range of viscosity indices (VI), indicating that the characteristic of interest is not necessarily correlated with VI or any of its associated parameters such as the VII content or the lubricant's VII dosage related shear behavior."
(Note: Authors refer to PVC100 divided by PVC40 as the PVC40/PVC100 ratio; so, it's sloppy terminology on their side, as it should be referred to as PVC100/PVC40.)
What's interesting here is that this PVC effect is not being indirectly caused by the VI effect (sensitivity of atmospheric-pressure viscosity to temperature) but it's a separate effect where the "PVC index" (sensitivity of PVC to temperature) is playing a role. Some GTL base stocks tend to have very high VIs, but this patent claims that they also tend to have high "PVC indexes," resulting in high viscosity under extreme pressure
and at high temperature, which results in a thicker EHL film (higher oil-film strength) at high temperature.