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Sperm oil

Sperm oil is a waxy liquid obtained from sperm whales. It is a clear, yellowish liquid with a very faint odor. Sperm oil has a different composition from common whale oil, obtained from rendered blubber. Although it is traditionally called an "oil", it is technically a liquid wax. It is composed of wax esters with a small proportion of triglycerides, an ester of an unsaturated fatty acid, and a branched-chain fatty alcohol.[1] It is a natural antioxidant and heat-transfer agent.[1] In the late-18th and early-19th centuries, sperm oil was prized as an illuminant for its bright, odorless flame and as a lubricant for its low viscosity and stability. It was supplanted in the late 19th century by less expensive alternatives such as kerosene and petroleum-based lubricants. With the 1987 international ban on whaling, sperm oil is no longer legally sold.[2]

The oil from bottlenose whales was sometimes called "Arctic sperm oil." It was cheaper than and inferior to true sperm oil.[3][4]

Processing edit

 
Sperm oil is extracted from the spermaceti organ and the junk of the sperm whale.

After killing a sperm whale, the whalers would pull the carcass alongside the ship, cut off the cranium and haul it on deck, whereupon they would cut a hole in it and bail out the matter inside with a bucket. The primary source of sperm oil was the spermaceti organ and the junk (or "melon"), the organs that serve to focus and modulate the animal's vocalizations. The matter from these organs was stored in casks to be processed on land; sometimes it was boiled first to prevent it going rancid. The blubber also contained smaller proportions of spermaceti, which was obtained by boiling the blubber on the ship itself.

On land, the casks of head-matter were allowed to chill during the winter, causing it to congeal into a spongy and viscous mass. The congealed matter was then loaded into wool sacks and placed in a press to squeeze out its liquid. This liquid was bottled and sold as "winter-strained sperm oil". This was the most valuable product: a lubricant that remained liquid in freezing winter temperatures. When spring came and the leftover solid matter melted a bit, the liquid was strained off and sold as "spring-strained sperm oil". In summer, the matter melted some more and the liquid was strained off to leave a fully solid wax. This wax, brown in color, was then bleached and sold as "spermaceti wax".[5][6]

Chemistry edit

Physical properties of sperm oil
specific gravity 0.884 at 15.6 °C[7]
flash point 260–266 °C[8]
saponification value 120–150.3[9]
unsaponifiable matter 17.5–44.0%[9]
refractive index 1.4649 at 15.6 °C[10][11]
iodine number (Wijs) 70.4–96.4[9]
viscosity 21–23 cSt at 37.5 °C[12]
viscosity index 180[13]

Sperm oil has a fairly low viscosity (roughly equal to coconut oil).[12] It retains its viscosity in high temperatures better than most oils. It does not tend to become rancid, dry out, or corrode metals. Sperm oil cannot be easily hydrogenated, and thus could not be used to make soap or margarine.[14][15] It is fairly resistant to oxidization.[16]

Spermaceti is a liquid wax, composed mostly of wax esters (chiefly cetyl palmitate) and a smaller proportion of triglycerides,[17] with oleic acid being the most common fatty acid. The proportion of wax esters in the spermaceti organ increases with the age of the whale: 38-51% in calves, 58-87% in adult females, and 71-94% in adult males. The blubber oil of the whale is about 66% wax.[18] When cooled to below 30 °C (86 °F), the waxes in spermaceti begin to crystallize.[19]

Winter-strained sperm oil is roughly two-thirds wax esters and one third triglycerides.[20][21] Most of the carbon chains are unsaturated, with 18:1 being the most common.[22] Unlike other toothed whales save the Amazon river dolphin, most of the carbon chains in the wax esters are relatively long (C10-C22).[18]

Applications edit

 
US consumption of sperm oil peaked in the mid-19th century, then saw a precipitous decline.

Sperm oil was particularly prized as an illuminant in oil lamps, as it burned more brightly and cleanly than any other available oil and gave off no foul odor.[6] It was replaced in the late-19th century by cheaper, more efficient kerosene.[citation needed]

In the US, sperm oil was used in cars as an additive to automatic transmission fluid until it was banned by the Endangered Species Act.[23] Prior to 1972, over 30 million lb (14 million kg) of sperm whale oil was used annually in lubricants because of its exceptional lubricity and heat stability.[24] In 1972, the sperm whale was listed as an Endangered Species. The following year, the US Congress amended the Endangered Species Act, outlawing the killing of whales and the use of their oil.[24] The loss of sperm oil had a profound impact in the automotive industry,[25] where for example, transmission failures rose from under 1 million in 1972 to over 8 million by 1975.[24]

Sperm oil was a popular lubricant. It worked well for fine, light machinery such as sewing machines and watches because it is thin, does not congeal or dry out and does not corrode metals. It was also used in heavy machinery such as locomotives and steam-powered looms because it can withstand high temperatures.[26] In the late 20th century, jojoba oil was discovered to be a better substitute for high-friction applications because it is even more stable at high temperatures. This caused sperm oil's price to collapse to a tenth of its previous value.[27]

Because of its very low freezing point, sperm oil saw widespread use in the aerospace industry.[28]

Sperm oil was used to protect metals from rust. A coat of sperm oil provided a temporary protection for the metal components in firearms, because it did not dry out or gum up.[29][30] It was the basis of the original (but not current) Rust-Oleum.

Sperm oil was used in Gun type nuclear bombs. In such a bomb, two lumps of uranium are fired towards each other in a tube. These two lumps combine and becomes larger than its critical mass. Oil was used to lubricate these tubes. As all other oils that were tested dried up after some time, sperm oil was used and was found to work.[31]

Gallery edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b [Transmission Digest, Volume 26, No. 2, October 2006, "The Science of Synthetic Sperm Whale Oil"]
  2. ^ . NOAA. 8 June 2004. Archived from the original on 30 October 2004.
  3. ^ Julius Lewkowitsch (1904). Chemical technology and analysis of oils, fats, and waxes. pg 870
  4. ^ . Archived from the original on 22 November 2013. Retrieved 13 March 2014.
  5. ^ "Historic Nantucket Magazine".
  6. ^ a b Wilson Heflin (2004). Herman Melville's Whaling Years. pg 232
  7. ^ Emil F. Dieterichs (1916). A Practical Treatise On Friction, Lubrication, Fats And Oils. pg 22
  8. ^ Richard P. Pohanish (2005). HazMat Data: For First Response, Transportation, Storage, and Security. pg 865
  9. ^ a b c Moninder Mohan Chakrabarty (2009). Chemistry And Technology Of Oils And Fats. pg 183
  10. ^ Blakeley, Abraham G.; Reilly, Edmund A. (1917). "Some Data on Sperm Oils Used for Burning Purposes". Journal of Industrial & Engineering Chemistry. 9 (12): 1099–1100. doi:10.1021/ie50096a014.
  11. ^ J. N. Goldsmith (1921). Table of Refractive Indices. pg 239
  12. ^ a b "Liquids - Kinematic Viscosities". www.engineeringtoolbox.com.
  13. ^ William Gordon Forbes (1943). Lubricants and cutting oils for machine tools. pg 69
  14. ^ Joh. N. Tønnessen, Arne Odd Johnsen (1984). The History of Modern Whaling, pg 228.
  15. ^ Robert Lloyd Webb (1988). On the Northwest: Commercial Whaling in the Pacific Northwest, 1790-1967. pg 144
  16. ^ Czesław Kajdas, S. S. K. Harvey, E. Wilusz (1990). Encyclopedia of Tribology, Volume 15. pg 308.
  17. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 1 June 2013. Retrieved 29 October 2012.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  18. ^ a b William F. Perrin, Bernd Würsig, J. G. M. Thewissen (2002). Encyclopedia of Marine Mammals. pg 1164
  19. ^ Malcolm R. Clarke (1978). Physical Properties of Spermaceti Oil in the Sperm Whale. Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom 2008-12-17 at the Wayback Machine
  20. ^ Spencer, G. F.; Tallent, W. H. (1973). "Sperm whale oil analysis by gas chromatography and mass spectrometry". Journal of the American Oil Chemists' Society. 50 (6): 202–206. doi:10.1007/BF02640490. S2CID 95490342.
  21. ^ . Archived from the original on 8 April 2013. Retrieved 23 December 2012.
  22. ^ . Archived from the original on 8 April 2013. Retrieved 30 December 2012.
  23. ^ Information, Reed Business (1 May 1975). "New Scientist". Reed Business Information – via Google Books. {{cite web}}: |first= has generic name (help)
  24. ^ a b c Landis, Phil. Gears for the Transmission Rebuilding Industry. Oxnard: Automatic Transmission Rebuilders Association, 2010. Print.
  25. ^ "Transmission Problems in Cars Linked to Ban on Whale Killing". The New York Times. 17 April 1975. Retrieved 1 March 2020.
  26. ^ : Paul Lucier, Scientists and Swindlers (2008). Consulting on Coal and Oil in America. pg 152.
  27. ^ James R. McGuigan, R. Charles Moyer, Frederick H. deB Harris (2010). Managerial Economics, pg 29.
  28. ^ American Whaling, New Bedford Whaling Museum. Modified August 22, 2014.
  29. ^ Roy F. Dunlap (1963). Gunsmithing: The complete sourcebook of firearms design, construction, alteration, and restoration for amateur and professional gunsmiths. pg= 84.
  30. ^ William S. Brophy (1985). The Springfield 1903 Rifles. pg 71.
  31. ^ "nukes,sperm whale". www.abc.net.au. Retrieved 13 November 2023.

sperm, waxy, liquid, obtained, from, sperm, whales, clear, yellowish, liquid, with, very, faint, odor, different, composition, from, common, whale, obtained, from, rendered, blubber, although, traditionally, called, technically, liquid, composed, esters, with,. Sperm oil is a waxy liquid obtained from sperm whales It is a clear yellowish liquid with a very faint odor Sperm oil has a different composition from common whale oil obtained from rendered blubber Although it is traditionally called an oil it is technically a liquid wax It is composed of wax esters with a small proportion of triglycerides an ester of an unsaturated fatty acid and a branched chain fatty alcohol 1 It is a natural antioxidant and heat transfer agent 1 In the late 18th and early 19th centuries sperm oil was prized as an illuminant for its bright odorless flame and as a lubricant for its low viscosity and stability It was supplanted in the late 19th century by less expensive alternatives such as kerosene and petroleum based lubricants With the 1987 international ban on whaling sperm oil is no longer legally sold 2 The oil from bottlenose whales was sometimes called Arctic sperm oil It was cheaper than and inferior to true sperm oil 3 4 Contents 1 Processing 2 Chemistry 3 Applications 4 Gallery 5 ReferencesProcessing edit nbsp Sperm oil is extracted from the spermaceti organ and the junk of the sperm whale After killing a sperm whale the whalers would pull the carcass alongside the ship cut off the cranium and haul it on deck whereupon they would cut a hole in it and bail out the matter inside with a bucket The primary source of sperm oil was the spermaceti organ and the junk or melon the organs that serve to focus and modulate the animal s vocalizations The matter from these organs was stored in casks to be processed on land sometimes it was boiled first to prevent it going rancid The blubber also contained smaller proportions of spermaceti which was obtained by boiling the blubber on the ship itself On land the casks of head matter were allowed to chill during the winter causing it to congeal into a spongy and viscous mass The congealed matter was then loaded into wool sacks and placed in a press to squeeze out its liquid This liquid was bottled and sold as winter strained sperm oil This was the most valuable product a lubricant that remained liquid in freezing winter temperatures When spring came and the leftover solid matter melted a bit the liquid was strained off and sold as spring strained sperm oil In summer the matter melted some more and the liquid was strained off to leave a fully solid wax This wax brown in color was then bleached and sold as spermaceti wax 5 6 Chemistry editPhysical properties of sperm oil specific gravity 0 884 at 15 6 C 7 flash point 260 266 C 8 saponification value 120 150 3 9 unsaponifiable matter 17 5 44 0 9 refractive index 1 4649 at 15 6 C 10 11 iodine number Wijs 70 4 96 4 9 viscosity 21 23 cSt at 37 5 C 12 viscosity index 180 13 Sperm oil has a fairly low viscosity roughly equal to coconut oil 12 It retains its viscosity in high temperatures better than most oils It does not tend to become rancid dry out or corrode metals Sperm oil cannot be easily hydrogenated and thus could not be used to make soap or margarine 14 15 It is fairly resistant to oxidization 16 Spermaceti is a liquid wax composed mostly of wax esters chiefly cetyl palmitate and a smaller proportion of triglycerides 17 with oleic acid being the most common fatty acid The proportion of wax esters in the spermaceti organ increases with the age of the whale 38 51 in calves 58 87 in adult females and 71 94 in adult males The blubber oil of the whale is about 66 wax 18 When cooled to below 30 C 86 F the waxes in spermaceti begin to crystallize 19 Winter strained sperm oil is roughly two thirds wax esters and one third triglycerides 20 21 Most of the carbon chains are unsaturated with 18 1 being the most common 22 Unlike other toothed whales save the Amazon river dolphin most of the carbon chains in the wax esters are relatively long C10 C22 18 Applications edit nbsp US consumption of sperm oil peaked in the mid 19th century then saw a precipitous decline Sperm oil was particularly prized as an illuminant in oil lamps as it burned more brightly and cleanly than any other available oil and gave off no foul odor 6 It was replaced in the late 19th century by cheaper more efficient kerosene citation needed In the US sperm oil was used in cars as an additive to automatic transmission fluid until it was banned by the Endangered Species Act 23 Prior to 1972 over 30 million lb 14 million kg of sperm whale oil was used annually in lubricants because of its exceptional lubricity and heat stability 24 In 1972 the sperm whale was listed as an Endangered Species The following year the US Congress amended the Endangered Species Act outlawing the killing of whales and the use of their oil 24 The loss of sperm oil had a profound impact in the automotive industry 25 where for example transmission failures rose from under 1 million in 1972 to over 8 million by 1975 24 Sperm oil was a popular lubricant It worked well for fine light machinery such as sewing machines and watches because it is thin does not congeal or dry out and does not corrode metals It was also used in heavy machinery such as locomotives and steam powered looms because it can withstand high temperatures 26 In the late 20th century jojoba oil was discovered to be a better substitute for high friction applications because it is even more stable at high temperatures This caused sperm oil s price to collapse to a tenth of its previous value 27 Because of its very low freezing point sperm oil saw widespread use in the aerospace industry 28 Sperm oil was used to protect metals from rust A coat of sperm oil provided a temporary protection for the metal components in firearms because it did not dry out or gum up 29 30 It was the basis of the original but not current Rust Oleum Sperm oil was used in Gun type nuclear bombs In such a bomb two lumps of uranium are fired towards each other in a tube These two lumps combine and becomes larger than its critical mass Oil was used to lubricate these tubes As all other oils that were tested dried up after some time sperm oil was used and was found to work 31 Gallery edit nbsp A spermaceti press nbsp Strained sperm oil being bottled nbsp A spermaceti wax candle nbsp nbsp Sperm whales celebrate the discovery of new oil wells in Pennsylvania The proliferation of mineral oils reduced the demand for their species oil 1861 cartoon from Vanity Fair nbsp nbsp Winter Sperm Oil advertisement Charleston Daily Courier 1833References edit a b Transmission Digest Volume 26 No 2 October 2006 The Science of Synthetic Sperm Whale Oil 2 000 Penalty Assessed for Illegal Attempted Sale of Sperm Whale Oil Over Internet NOAA 8 June 2004 Archived from the original on 30 October 2004 Julius Lewkowitsch 1904 Chemical technology and analysis of oils fats and waxes pg 870 Official Swatch Website Swatch International Archived from the original on 22 November 2013 Retrieved 13 March 2014 Historic Nantucket Magazine a b Wilson Heflin 2004 Herman Melville s Whaling Years pg 232 Emil F Dieterichs 1916 A Practical Treatise On Friction Lubrication Fats And Oils pg 22 Richard P Pohanish 2005 HazMat Data For First Response Transportation Storage and Security pg 865 a b c Moninder Mohan Chakrabarty 2009 Chemistry And Technology Of Oils And Fats pg 183 Blakeley Abraham G Reilly Edmund A 1917 Some Data on Sperm Oils Used for Burning Purposes Journal of Industrial amp Engineering Chemistry 9 12 1099 1100 doi 10 1021 ie50096a014 J N Goldsmith 1921 Table of Refractive Indices pg 239 a b Liquids Kinematic Viscosities www engineeringtoolbox com William Gordon Forbes 1943 Lubricants and cutting oils for machine tools pg 69 Joh N Tonnessen Arne Odd Johnsen 1984 The History of Modern Whaling pg 228 Robert Lloyd Webb 1988 On the Northwest Commercial Whaling in the Pacific Northwest 1790 1967 pg 144 Czeslaw Kajdas S S K Harvey E Wilusz 1990 Encyclopedia of Tribology Volume 15 pg 308 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 1 June 2013 Retrieved 29 October 2012 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link a b William F Perrin Bernd Wursig J G M Thewissen 2002 Encyclopedia of Marine Mammals pg 1164 Malcolm R Clarke 1978 Physical Properties of Spermaceti Oil in the Sperm Whale Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom Archived 2008 12 17 at the Wayback Machine Spencer G F Tallent W H 1973 Sperm whale oil analysis by gas chromatography and mass spectrometry Journal of the American Oil Chemists Society 50 6 202 206 doi 10 1007 BF02640490 S2CID 95490342 J W Hagemann and J A Rothfus 1978 Oxidative Stability of Wax Esters by Thermogravimetric Analysis JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN OIL CHEMISTS SOCIETY Vol 56 No 6 Pages 629 631 Archived from the original on 8 April 2013 Retrieved 23 December 2012 Gayland F Spencer 1978 Alkoxy Acyl Combinations in the Wax Esters from Winterized Sperm Whale Oil by Gas Chromatography Mass Spectrometry Archived from the original on 8 April 2013 Retrieved 30 December 2012 Information Reed Business 1 May 1975 New Scientist Reed Business Information via Google Books a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a first has generic name help a b c Landis Phil Gears for the Transmission Rebuilding Industry Oxnard Automatic Transmission Rebuilders Association 2010 Print Transmission Problems in Cars Linked to Ban on Whale Killing The New York Times 17 April 1975 Retrieved 1 March 2020 Paul Lucier Scientists and Swindlers 2008 Consulting on Coal and Oil in America pg 152 James R McGuigan R Charles Moyer Frederick H deB Harris 2010 Managerial Economics pg 29 American Whaling New Bedford Whaling Museum Modified August 22 2014 Roy F Dunlap 1963 Gunsmithing The complete sourcebook of firearms design construction alteration and restoration for amateur and professional gunsmiths pg 84 William S Brophy 1985 The Springfield 1903 Rifles pg 71 nukes sperm whale www abc net au Retrieved 13 November 2023 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sperm oil amp oldid 1187151796, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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