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

Flash Point

Lowest temperature at which lubricant vapor ignites with an ignition source; used for safety classification and transportation regulations.

Definition

The flash point of a lubricant is the lowest temperature at which its vapor forms an ignitable mixture with air when exposed to a small ignition source. It is a safety parameter, not a performance parameter, and is required for transportation classification and storage regulations.

Two test methods are used:

  • Cleveland Open Cup (COC) — ASTM D92: higher temperatures recorded; used for lubricating oils and hydraulic fluids
  • Pensky-Martens Closed Cup (PMCC) — ASTM D93: lower temperatures; used for fuels and solvents; more conservative

Typical flash point ranges:

  • Mineral base oils (Group I/II): 200–240°C COC
  • PAO (Group IV): 220–270°C COC depending on viscosity grade
  • Naphthenic process oils: 180–230°C COC

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