4.6 Review

A critical review of marine biofilms on metallic materials

Journal

NPJ MATERIALS DEGRADATION
Volume 6, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41529-022-00234-4

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Australian Research Council (ARC) [180101465]
  2. Curtin Corrosion Centre (Bentley, Western Australia)

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The formation of multi-species biofilms on marine infrastructure leads to significant economic losses and lacks effective and environmentally friendly treatment methods. Incomplete understanding of natural biofilm development remains a major limitation for biofilm control measures.
The formation of multi-species biofilms on marine infrastructure costs the global economy US $ billions annually, resulting in biofouling and microbiologically influenced corrosion. It is well documented that complex biofilms form on almost any submerged surface, yet there are still no truly effective and environmentally friendly treatment or prevention options available. An incomplete fundamental understanding of natural biofilm development remains a key limitation for biofilm control measures. The purpose of this review is to compile the current literature and knowledge gaps surrounding the development of multi-species biofilms in marine conditions on metals.

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