Rust Inhibitors in Metalworking Fluids
Rust Inhibitors in Metalworking Fluids
Freshly machined steel surfaces are highly reactive. Between operations and during storage, residual moisture and oxygen cause flash rusting within hours.
Key Chemical Types
Amine carboxylates: Formed in-situ in alkaline metalworking fluids (pH 8.5–10). Diethanolamine oleate, triethanolamine stearate. Effective for ferrous metals.
Sulfonates: Oil-soluble sulfonates are the primary rust inhibitor in straight cutting oils. Calcium and sodium sulfonates are preferred replacements for barium types.
Triazoles (BTA, TTA): Benzotriazole (BTA) and tolyltriazole (TTA) are selective for copper and copper alloys (brass, bronze). They form a stable passivating film at 50–500 ppm. Essential in mixed-metal machining.
Ferrous vs Non-Ferrous Protection
| Metal | Preferred Inhibitor | Concern |
|---|---|---|
| Steel | Sulfonates, amine carboxylates | Concentration threshold |
| Cast iron | Borate + sulfonate | Porosity penetration |
| Aluminium | Low-pH-stable carboxylates | Avoid strong alkali |
| Copper/Brass | BTA, TTA | Low dosage critical |
HMEChem supplies rust inhibitor concentrates and triazole blends for water-soluble and straight metalworking fluids.
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