4.6 Article

Effect of One Sulfate-Reducing Bacterium SRB-Z Isolated from Pearl River on the Corrosion Behavior of Q235 Carbon Steel

Journal

COATINGS
Volume 13, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/coatings13020478

Keywords

microbiologically influenced corrosion; isolated sulfate-reducing bacteria; pitting corrosion; FeS-SRB; Fe galvanic couple

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study isolated a strain SRB-Z from the Pearl River in Guangzhou and examined its effect and mechanisms on corrosion of Q235 carbon steel. The results indicate that SRB-Z can cause serious pitting corrosion, with a maximum pit depth of 54 μm after 7 days of immersion corrosion. SRB-Z promoted the cathodic reaction rate of Q235, and pitting corrosion occurred due to galvanic corrosion caused by the formation of an FeS-SRB/Fe galvanic couple under the synergistic effect of the SRB-Z biofilm and its metabolite (H2S) on the Q235 coupon surfaces.
Sulfate-reducing bacteria (SRB) have long been reported to participate in metal corrosion processes in anoxic environments. However, existing theories still need enrichment by identifying more corrosive microorganisms and exploring more plausible microbiologically-influenced corrosion pathways. In this study, a strain SRB-Z was isolated from the Pearl River in Guangzhou, and its effect and mechanisms on corrosion of Q235 carbon steel were examined. The biofilms, corrosion products, pits, and corrosion electrochemistry were characterized by SEM, XPS, CLSM, EDS, white light interferometer 3D profilometry, and electrochemical analysis, respectively. The results of this study indicate that SRB-Z could cause serious pitting of Q235 carbon steel. The maximum pit depth reached 54 mu m after immersion corrosion for 7 days. Strain SRB-Z promoted the cathodic reaction rate of Q235. The relative analyses revealed that pitting corrosion occurred because of galvanic corrosion caused by the formation of an FeS-SRB/Fe galvanic couple under the synergistic effect of the SRB-Z biofilm and its metabolite (H2S) on the Q235 coupon surfaces.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available