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Corrosion of Iron by Sulfate-Reducing Bacteria: New Views of an Old Problem

机译:硫酸盐还原菌对铁的腐蚀作用:一个老问题的新观点

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About a century ago, researchers first recognized a connection between the activity of environmental microorganisms and cases of anaerobic iron corrosion. Since then, such microbially influenced corrosion (MIC) has gained prominence and its technical and economic implications are now widely recognized. Under anoxic conditions (e.g., in oil and gas pipelines), sulfate-reducing bacteria (SRB) are commonly considered the main culprits of MIC. This perception largely stems from three recurrent observations. First, anoxic sulfate-rich environments (e.g., anoxic seawater) are particularly corrosive. Second, SRB and their characteristic corrosion product iron sulfide are ubiquitously associated with anaerobic corrosion damage, and third, no other physiological group produces comparably severe corrosion damage in laboratory-grown pure cultures. However, there remain many open questions as to the underlying mechanisms and their relative contributions to corrosion. On the one hand, SRB damage iron constructions indirectly through a corrosive chemical agent, hydrogen sulfide, formed by the organisms as a dissimilatory product from sulfate reduction with organic compounds or hydrogen (“chemical microbially influenced corrosion”; CMIC). On the other hand, certain SRB can also attack iron via withdrawal of electrons (“electrical microbially influenced corrosion”; EMIC), viz ., directly by metabolic coupling. Corrosion of iron by SRB is typically associated with the formation of iron sulfides (FeS) which, paradoxically, may reduce corrosion in some cases while they increase it in others. This brief review traces the historical twists in the perception of SRB-induced corrosion, considering the presently most plausible explanations as well as possible early misconceptions in the understanding of severe corrosion in anoxic, sulfate-rich environments.
机译:大约一个世纪前,研究人员首先认识到环境微生物活性与厌氧铁腐蚀情况之间的联系。从那时起,这种微生物影响的腐蚀(MIC)引起了人们的关注,其技术和经济意义现已得到广泛认可。在缺氧条件下(例如在石油和天然气管道中),硫酸盐还原菌(SRB)通常被认为是MIC的主要元凶。这种看法主要源于三个经常性观察。首先,富含缺氧硫酸盐的环境(例如缺氧海水)特别具有腐蚀性。第二,SRB及其特有的腐蚀产物硫化铁普遍与厌氧腐蚀损害有关,第三,在实验室培养的纯培养物中,没有其他生理基团产生相对严重的腐蚀损害。但是,关于潜在的机理及其对腐蚀的相对贡献,仍然存在许多悬而未决的问题。一方面,SRB通过腐蚀性化学剂硫化氢间接破坏铁结构,硫化氢是有机物作为硫酸盐与有机化合物或氢还原反应的异化产物而形成的(“化学微生物影响的腐蚀”; CMIC)。另一方面,某些SRB还可以通过电子代谢(直接通过代谢耦合)撤出电子(“微生物影响的电腐蚀”; EMIC)来侵蚀铁。 SRB对铁的腐蚀通常与硫化铁(FeS)的形成有关,这矛盾的是,在某些情况下可以减少腐蚀,而在其他情况下则可以增加腐蚀。这篇简短的综述追溯了SRB引起的腐蚀感知的历史转折,考虑了目前最合理的解释以及在对缺氧,富含硫酸盐的环境中的严重腐蚀的理解中可能的早期误解。

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