For decades, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has worked to curb the use of chlorine, sulfur and phosphorus compounds in metalworking fluids.
Known as extreme pressure agents, the chemicals help increase lubricity and reduce heat during machining operations, thereby extending tool life and improving surface finish, but they have been linked to a variety of health risks, from cancers to skin disorders.
Not only does the EPA consider fluids containing them to be “dangerous waste,” they must be treated with biocide—another health concern—to prevent the putrid odors they can develop, known in machine shops as “Monday morning stink.”
While these fluids and oils nonetheless work quite well when properly maintained, the hassle leaves some metalworking professionals wondering if there isn’t a safer, simpler, more environmentally friendly alternative.
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Jim English isn’t a metalworking professional, but he knows an awful lot about the chemistry behind metalworking fluids.
“I helped develop Rain-X, the stuff you spray on your windshield to prevent streaking,” he says. The company behind Rain-X later “received a grant from Congress to make a similar product for the Air Force to use on the windscreens of jet fighters,” he recalls
Today, English is the president of Tool-X, which also received a government grant—in this case, to make nanolubricants for the U.S. Army.
Afterward, a business group from New England questioned whether the technology would be useful for CNC machining. That was in 2006, and within four years, the team had developed an oil-based nanofluid, followed by a water-soluble version.
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