Lubricant Additives & Specialty Chemicals | Manufacturer & Sourcing Partner | Jinzhou, China — Est. 2013
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Additive

Emulsifier

Surfactant additive that stabilizes oil-water emulsions in metalworking fluids and industrial applications by reducing interfacial tension.

Definition

In metalworking and industrial fluid applications, an emulsifier is a surfactant additive that stabilizes oil-water emulsions by reducing interfacial tension between the two immiscible phases. Emulsifiers allow oil and water to form stable dispersions that resist separation.

Types of metalworking fluid emulsifiers:

  • Anionic surfactants — petroleum sulfonates, fatty acid soaps; most common; negatively charged, effective in hard water if paired with correct countercation
  • Nonionic surfactants — ethoxylated alcohols, sorbitan esters (e.g., PIBSA-based); less sensitive to water hardness; good compatibility with biocides
  • Cationic surfactants — rare in MWF; antimicrobial properties but incompatible with many additives

PIBSA (polyisobutenyl succinic anhydride) derivatives are widely used as emulsifiers in both soluble cutting fluids and emulsion explosives. HLB (Hydrophilic-Lipophilic Balance) value guides emulsifier selection for oil-in-water vs water-in-oil systems.

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