Comprehensive Guide to R&O Additives

HiTEC® Industrial Additives

Afton Chemical is a global leader in petroleum additives, producing world-class solutions for the industrial lubricant market. Afton's HiTEC® rust and oxidation (R&O) additives are designed for blending across a range of base oils, specifications, and performance tiers, providing formulation flexibility and inventory consolidation. These ashless R&O additive packages extend the life of circulating systems, improving operating efficiency and reducing lifecycle costs.
R&O additives are critical components of industrial lubricants exposed to moisture, high temperatures, or corrosive environments. This guide covers how these rust and oxidation additives work, where they are used, and how to select the right package, and it highlights Afton Chemical’s HiTEC® solutions for R&O industrial oils.

Understanding R&O Additives

R&O additives are multicomponent packages that prevent moisture-driven corrosion on metal surfaces and slow oxidative degradation of base oils—key drivers of varnish, sludge, and viscosity increase. Their primary role is to extend service life and protect equipment in systems operating under moderate loads and stable temperatures.

Core benefits of these rust and oxidation additives include extended drain intervals, cleaner systems with reduced varnish and sludge, lower wear from corrosion control, improved foam control and air release when paired with antifoam agents, and consistent viscosity from strong oxidative stability.

Compared with other lubricant types, R&O oils prioritize corrosion and oxidation resistance without heavy extreme-pressure chemistry. Versus anti-wear (AW) hydraulic oils, R&O fluids typically contain lower levels of zinc or other anti-wear agents and target lightly loaded bearings and turbines. Versus extreme-pressure (EP) gear oils, they omit high-sulfur/phosphorus chemistries intended for severe sliding. This makes R&O formulations ideal for turbines, circulating systems, compressors, paper machines, and lightly loaded gear and bearing applications where cleanliness and stability are paramount.
 

R&O Additive Components

While R&O additive packages typically account for a small percentage of the total lubricant formulation (often less than 1% by weight), they significantly impact the fluid's final performance. These are the common components and the role they play in the formulation:
 

Rust Inhibitors

Form hydrophobic films to block water-induced corrosion

Oxidation Inhibitors

Phenolic and aminic antioxidants interrupt free radical chains and slow thermal and oxidative breakdown

Metal Deactivators

Additives, such as benzotriazole derivatives, passivate copper and other catalytic metals

Demulsifiers

Promote rapid water separation to reduce rust and ease dehydration

Antifoam Agents

Often silicone-based, these agents reduce foam and improve air release

Friction Modifiers

Reduce metal-to-metal contact to prevent wear

Together, these components stabilize the base oil under heat and oxygen exposure, protect surfaces from water and acidic byproducts, improve filterability and contaminant separability, and limit deposit formation that can impair valves and bearings.

Common Applications

The following lubricant applications benefit from excellent rust protection, strong water separability, low varnish tendency, and dependable air release from modern R&O and circulating oil additives:
 

Turbine oils for steam, gas, and hydro turbines

Circulating oils for paper machines and metal processing

Compressor and vacuum pump oils where deposit control is critical

Lightly loaded gearboxes and bearings under moderate conditions

Hydraulic systems without heavy AW/EP

Heat transfer and quench oils requiring oxidation control and cleanliness


Selecting the Right R&O Additives

When selecting an R&O additive for your formulation, best practices include matching the additive chemistry to the base oil and viscosity grade, considering the application and severity of the operation, and accounting for key methods and approvals.

Different base oils will have varying antioxidant responses and additive compatibilities. Operating conditions, such as temperature, air release, water ingress, and system metallurgy, will impact oxidation rates, demulsibility targets, foaming tendency, and copper passivation needs. High deposit control and filterability goals may require a higher-performing additive package.

Approvals heavily influence additive choices. Turbine OEMs have specifications that define performance criteria that lubricant marketers use to ensure compatibility, reliability, and safety in turbine systems. Common OEM turbine approvals include GEK 32568/107395, Siemens TLV/T, Alstom HTD 90117V, and MAN Turbo. In addition to OEM specifications, look for performance against key methods and approvals, such as ASTM D4304 (steam and gas turbines), ASTM D943 (TOST), ASTM D4310 and D7843 (varnish/insolubles), ASTM D1401 (water separability), ASTM D892 and D6082 (foam), and ASTM D665 and D1748 (rust). Meeting these benchmarks indicates robust rust and oxidation protection.

Choosing the right R&O additive can be challenging and may involve lengthy qualification and testing. ChemPoint and Afton have technical specialists available to assist you in this process. Contact us today to speak with a technical representative.
 

Afton Chemical HiTEC® Portfolio

Circulating Oil Additive Packages

Turbine Oil Additive Packages

Compressor Oil Additive Packages

Availability, treat rates, and approvals vary by region and formulation. Contact ChemPoint for current datasheets, OEM approvals, and recommendations tailored to your base oil preference, operating conditions, and needs.
HiTEC® is a registered trademark of Afton Chemical Corporation.

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