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. 1991 Oct;57(10):2804-9.
doi: 10.1128/aem.57.10.2804-2809.1991.

Effect of hydrogenase and mixed sulfate-reducing bacterial populations on the corrosion of steel

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Effect of hydrogenase and mixed sulfate-reducing bacterial populations on the corrosion of steel

R D Bryant et al. Appl Environ Microbiol. 1991 Oct.

Abstract

The importance of hydrogenase activity to corrosion of steel was assessed by using mixed populations of sulfate-reducing bacteria isolated from corroded and noncorroded oil pipelines. Biofilms which developed on the steel studs contained detectable numbers of sulfate-reducing bacteria (10 increasing to 10/0.5 cm). However, the biofilm with active hydrogenase activity (i.e., corrosion pipeline organisms), as measured by a semiquantitative commercial kit, was associated with a significantly higher corrosion rate (7.79 mm/year) relative to noncorrosive biofilm (0.48 mm/year) with 10 sulfate-reducing bacteria per 0.5 cm but no measurable hydrogenase activity. The importance of hydrogenase and the microbial sulfate-reducing bacterial population making up the biofilm are discussed relative to biocorrosion.

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References

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