Testing the Dilution Rate of Diesel in Engine Oil in Accordance with ASTM D7593

Applications | 2019 | ShimadzuInstrumentation
GC
Industries
Energy & Chemicals
Manufacturer
Shimadzu

Summary

Importance of the Topic


The presence of unburned fuel such as diesel in engine oils degrades viscosity and lubrication performance. Monitoring fuel dilution is essential for assessing oil deterioration and scheduling replacements. Rapid and reliable quantification of diesel contamination supports preventive maintenance, quality control in automotive and industrial settings, and extends equipment life while reducing downtime and costs.

Objectives and Study Overview


This study demonstrates a fast, high-throughput gas chromatography method with backflush to measure diesel dilution in used lubricating oil in compliance with ASTM D7593. Standard samples ranging from 0 to 10 % diesel in a 75 mm2/s base oil were prepared. The goal was to optimize chromatographic conditions, assess linearity, repeatability, and long-term stability, and confirm that the method meets standard requirements without extensive sample pretreatment.

Methodology and Instrumentation


The analytical workflow employs an inline backflush configuration to remove high-boiling point oil matrix components immediately after elution of diesel markers.
  • Instrumentation:
    • Nexis GC-2030 gas chromatograph with APC electronic pressure controller
    • AOC-20i autosampler
    • RESTEK SH-Rxi-1ms capillary column (15 m × 0.25 mm I.D., 0.25 µm film)
    • Flame Ionization Detector (FID)
  • Chromatographic conditions:
    • Column temperature: 225 °C (hold 4 min)
    • Injection: Split 1 : 100, 350 °C
    • Carrier gas: Nitrogen at 2.3 mL/min (constant pressure mode)
    • Backflush start: 1.8 min (end of n-C20 elution), APC pressure ramped from 210 to 250 kPa
    • Sample volume: 0.1 µL, rinse solvent CS₂

Main Results and Discussion


Calibration performed over 0–10 % diesel exhibited excellent linearity (R² ≥ 0.9996). Chromatograms of standard mixtures clearly separated diesel components from base oil peaks within a 4 min cycle. Repeatability tests (n = 10) at dilution levels 1 – 10 % showed %RSD below 1.4 %, meeting ASTM precision requirements. A long-term stability study (600 injections of 3 % diesel) yielded a %RSD of 2.3 %, demonstrating robust performance with periodic septa replacement.

Benefits and Practical Applications


The backflush approach reduces cycle times to under 5 minutes and avoids extensive solvent dilution or cleanup. Dual backflush lines can double sample throughput per GC unit. Use of nitrogen carrier gas and minimal sample preparation lowers operational costs. The method supports routine monitoring of engine oil in research, QA/QC laboratories, and field service, enabling rapid detection of fuel contamination.

Future Trends and Applications


Advances in GC automation and integration with real-time data analytics will further increase throughput and enable predictive maintenance strategies. Miniaturized columns and enhanced detectors may allow in-vehicle or on-site monitoring. Expansion to biodiesel and blended fuels analysis will address evolving fuel technologies and regulatory requirements.

Conclusion


The ASTM D7593-compliant backflush GC method delivers fast, accurate determination of diesel dilution in engine oils with high repeatability and long-term stability. Its efficiency, cost savings, and compliance with industry standards make it a valuable tool for lubrication monitoring and preventive maintenance programs.

References


  • ASTM D7593-14: Standard Test Method for Fuel Dilution in Used Lubricating Oils by Gas Chromatography Backflush (Application News G314).
  • ASTM D3524: Standard Test Method for Gum in Fuels by Jet Evaporation (Application News G310).
  • JPI-5S-23: Diesel Content Determination in Oil (Application News G311).
  • ASTM D3525: Standard Test Method for Distillation of Petroleum Products (Application News G312).
  • JPI-5S-24: Gasoline Content Determination in Oil (Application News G312/G313).

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