Posted inVehicles

Lubricants: the backbone to a century of motoring evolution

2020 Emilia Romagna Grand Prix, Sunday - LAT images

Over the last century, scientific breakthroughs in motoring have seen the capabilities of industrial, commercial and motorsport vehicles rise exponentially to meet drivers’ needs. However, it’s fair to say that none of these innovations would achieve their potential without the vast strides made by lubricant technology every step of the way.

Fausto Lupone, automotive sector expert, Petronas Lubricants International.

Lubricants may seem like a second thought for the industrial buyer or the first-time driver looking to take their test as quickly as possible to get on the road. However, the contribution of oils to motoring is fundamental and unparalleled. In fact, it is now inseparable from the high-class performances challenging every part of the industry to innovate and advance.

Petronas’ experts share how the power and agility of lubricants have shaped motoring in the past, craft tailored performances in the present, and become inseparable partners to those innovating the future of motoring.

A rich heritage in winning formulas

Motor oil was never a retrospective attrition to the motorist’s arsenal of tools. It has always been essential to performance. These first lubricants reduced friction in far more ways than one. Born of steam engine innovations following the industrial revolution, they emerged side-by-side with cars as they entered the international scene. The ability of quality lubricants to optimise and lengthen the performance of engines not only allowed early drivers to hit the road smoothly for the first time but, consequently, it paved the way for the acceptance and development of the motor car. Critically, lubricants proved to the world that a frictionless motorcar ride was far better than the ‘faster horses’ which the people supposedly wanted!

As lubricants developed, so did vehicles. Fiat, for instance, began its lubricants division in 1912, designing ‘first fill’ fluids that would soon become the industry standard for achieving optimal performance on the road. As the Second World War prompted a need for higher performance military vehicles, lubricants enabled this. In the post-war period, this newfound variety and quality in motor oils allowed the car industry to evolve its design diversity to cater for the modern drivers of the 1960s.

Advanced formulation and manufacturing never failed to meet the needs of the latest contemporary technologies. As a result, the knowledge that new engine types and new materials could be supported by key lubricant suppliers has powered motoring innovation ever since.

Collaborating to achieve the best results possible

With a century of development in fluid technology under its belt, the lubricants industry is now capable of truly democratising driving in the modern day. This means ensuring that every industry or individual can secure the highest quality performance from their vehicle possible, regardless of the make or model.

Optimal compatibility between system and product is only achievable through close collaboration between lubricant developers and original equipment manufacturers (OEMs). Both teams must share knowledge and workspaces to ensure that lubricants are co-engineered to achieve the highest standards for specific vehicles. A continued commitment to high quality research is what enables lubricants manufacturers to turn their hand to any brief, understanding the needs of equipment, recognising challenges and ultimately formulating the best results for the OEM’s customers.

For instance, the development of a scheme like Petronas Lubricants International’s (PLI’s) Fluid Technology Solutions (FTS) programme has helped to maximise productivity for customers, with value-added products and services that are global, yet refined to specific needs. Through detailed user and market research, analysis of legislative requirements and collaboration between engineers and scientists, schemes like this foster a unique approach to deliver the right fluid to the right user.

The development of lubricants for Formula One cars is a case in point. The collaboration between Mercedes and Petronas began with the engineering of fuels and lubricants independently by PLI, which were then handed over to the Mercedes team for testing. However, in 2014, an integration exercise saw the teams begin to work much more closely together, enabling Petronas specialists to gain a better understanding of technical aspects of the Mercedes engine, thereby increasing trust as well as efficiency and delivering results. The results were immediate, and the Mercedes-AMG Petronas team has won every championship since.

Powering the future of sustainable motoring

The lubricants industry has always been highly adaptable to the development of new vehicle technologies. Now, as motoring undergoes the biggest shift towards sustainability in its history, lubricants science is leading the way by enabling ‘greener’ technologies to reach their potential, ultimately proving the value of eco-friendly vehicles to manufacturers, investors and consumers.

Research into lubricants to empower hybrid and electric vehicles (EVs) is already fully underway at the world’s top fluid development labs, as demand for these vehicles booms. EV motors require several fluids: oil for the reduction gear that is the EV’s transmission unit, and oils specifically for the electric motor if the oil cooling is used for the motor. Teams are focussing their R&D efforts on battery thermal management fluids: ways to help electric vehicles reach maximum performance when operating at various conditions and to prolong battery life.

The pace of innovation in vehicle performance is just as quick as that at the forefront of vehicle production and design. Both start with conversation; such discussions at Petronas’ EV Fluids Symposium are a direct result of the automotive care fostered in Fiat’s own garages over one hundred years ago. The innovations these conversations produce are then testament to that ongoing excellence: thermal battery fluids for optimised delivery of electrical energy, fluid for friction management of integrated driveline systems, and next-generation bearing greases for a quieter ride and long-lasting performance. Once again, lubricant technology remains firmly by the side of those pushing for the brighter future of driving.

Reducing waste is also high on the agenda of lubricant manufacturers. Older cars can still reach maximum performance through the development of modern lubricants which draw on the original oil specifications from the manufacturer. By using the most appropriate additives and the most advanced technologies to ensure protection of older engines against wear and tear, modern lubricants can enable top class, efficient performances from older cars. This ultimately prolongs their lifespan and delays highly polluting disposal processes.

Lubricants enable drivers to keep up with the pace of innovation

There has never been a more exciting time for motoring than today. The challenges of sustainability, combined with the democratisation of technology, means that pioneering new technologies are making their way to the market continually. Each must be able to demonstrate long-term efficiency to meet the expectations of drivers, and limit impact upon the environment. Quality lubricants will be integral in enabling cars to meet this high standard – as they have been throughout the history of the modern motor vehicle.