Thermally induced hydrocarbon oxidation is a self-accelerating autoxidation process and is divided into 'low'-, 30-120 • C, and 'high'-, >120 • C, temperature phases. The first has four stages -induction of radical chain reactions, propagation, branching and then termination. Mechanisms of these processes are described and discussed. Differences in hydrocarbon reactivity are related to molecular structure. For hydrocarbon oxidation >120 • C, the first stage is the same as low-temperature oxidation but with reduced selectivity and increased reactivity; second, the oxidation phase becomes diffusion controlled as hydrocarbon viscosities increase from progressive polycondensation of higher molecular weight products, causing varnish and sludge formation. Base oil oxidation stabilities depend upon their derivation, whether solvent neutral, hydrocracked or synthetic, and their response to antioxidant treatment. Lubricant oxidation control focuses on radical scavengers and hydroperoxide decomposers and their synergistic mixtures.Engine oils increasingly use phenolic and aminic antioxidants as radical scavengers with organometallic complex antioxidants. Sterically hindered phenols substituted at 2-and 6-positions by t-butyl groups are particularly effective, reacting successively with peroxy radicals to form stable cyclohexadieneone peroxides. Secondary amines as either two aryl or phenyl and naphthyl groups are very effective at eliminating four peroxy radicals per molecule. They are more effective by a ratio of 4:2 than the sterically hindered phenols below 120 • C. At higher temperatures a catalytic cycle is suggested as an extended stabilisation mechanism. Transition metal ions with two valence states, Fe 2+/3+ , Cu 1+/2+ , etc. as trace quantities of metal soaps catalyse/retard autoxidation according to concentration and/or combination of metals. They catalyse or inhibit oxidation by complexing and decomposing hydroperoxides or can also oxidise peroxy radicals and reduce alkyl radicals to inert products. Organomolybdenum complexes such as molybdenum dialkyldithiocarbamates, MDTC, are increasingly used to stabilise engine lubricants particularly because of synergy with other antioxidants such as alkylated diphenylamines. 107 R.M. Mortier et al. (eds.), Chemistry and Technology of Lubricants, 3rd edn.,