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Time:2025-06-11 13:45:53 Reading volume:
The best way to filter hydraulic oil requires multi-technique coordination according to the type of pollution (particles, water, gas, oxides, etc.) and system requirements. The following is a step-by-step high-efficiency filtration solution that takes into account the effect, cost and operability:
1. Visual inspection and simple test
- Particle pollution: The oil is turbid and there are black deposits on the filter paper (tested by ISO 4406/NAS 1638).
- Water pollution: The oil is milky white and there are water droplets at the bottom (Karl Fischer test, >100 ppm needs to be treated).
- Gas pollution: The oil is foamy and the pump is noisy (gas content >0.5% needs to be degassed).
2. Laboratory testing (when seriously polluted)
- Acid value (>0.1 mg KOH/g requires antioxidant treatment), viscosity change (±15% requires oil change).
Stage 1: Coarse filtration (large particle removal)
- Equipment: centrifuge or 100μm metal mesh filter.
- Operation:
- Pump oil from the bottom of the tank and filter it in a cycle until no visible impurities are present.
- Note: If the oil contains iron filings, install a magnetic filter.
Stage 2: Fine filtration (micron-sized particles)
- Equipment: high-precision oil filter with β₅≥200 (such as Pall, Hy-Pro).
- Parameters:
- Servo system: 1~3μm filter element (ISO 4406 14/12/9).
- Ordinary hydraulics: 5~10μm filter element (ISO 4406 16/14/11).
- Tips:
- replace the filter element immediately when the pressure difference is >0.15 MPa.
- The double-barrel filter can switch the filter element online without stopping the machine.
Stage 3: Dehydration (when moisture content is >50 ppm)
- Coagulation separation:
- Rapidly reduce moisture content to 50~100 ppm (suitable for routine maintenance).
- Vacuum dehydration:
- Deep dehydration to ≤10 ppm (need to be heated to 50~60℃, vacuum degree ≤-0.095 MPa).
Stage 4: Degassing and anti-oxidation (optional)
- Vacuum degassing: Treat oil with gas content >0.3%.
- Additive supplementation: Add 0.3% T501 antioxidant (when acid value is high).
IV. Operation optimization skills
1. Temperature control:
- Keep the oil temperature at 40~60℃ during filtration (too high accelerates oxidation, too low increases viscosity).
2. Flow matching:
- The oil filter flow ≥ 1.5 times the tank volume (e.g. 200L tank, choose 300L/h equipment).
3. Online monitoring:
- Install a particle sensor (such as Parker ICON) to warn of pollution in real time.
1. Filter element regeneration:
- The metal filter can be reused 3 times after ultrasonic cleaning, saving 30% of the cost.
2. Oil classification:
- Fine filtered oil is used for servo systems, and coarse filtered oil is used for low-pressure systems.
3. Pollution prevention:
- Install a breather dryer on the oil tank to prevent water inhalation.
- Problem 1: It still gets dirty quickly after filtering
Reason: Residual contaminants in the oil tank or pipeline.
Solution: Use flushing oil (low viscosity) to circulate and flush the system.
- Problem 2: Low vacuum dehydration efficiency
Reason: Poor vacuum pump sealing or insufficient oil temperature.
Solution: Check the sealing ring and heat it to 60℃.
- Particle cleanliness: ISO 4406 (target 14/12/9) or NAS 1638 (Class 5).
- Moisture content: ≤100 ppm (ordinary system), ≤50 ppm (servo system).
- Air content: ≤0.1% (precision hydraulics), ≤0.3% (ordinary equipment).
The best hydraulic oil filtration should follow:
1. Diagnose contamination → 2. Filter in stages (coarse → fine → dehydration) → 3. Verify indicators.
- Economic solution: coalescence + fine filtration (suitable for most factories).
- High-end solution: vacuum + electrostatic adsorption (aviation, servo system).
Regular filtration (every 500 working hours) can extend the oil life by 3 times and reduce equipment wear by more than 60%.