Center for Biofilm Engineering
Abstract:
"Mechanisms of microbially influenced corrosion"
09-003
The chapter demonstrates that biofilms can influence the corrosion of metals (1)
by consuming oxygen, the cathodic reactant; (2) by increasing the mass transport
of the corrosion reactants and products, therefore changing the kinetics of the
corrosion process; (3) by generating corrosive substances; and (4) by generating
substances that serve as auxiliary cathodic reactants. These interactions do not
exhaust the possible mechanisms by which biofilm microorganisms may affect the
corrosion of metals; rather, they represent those few instances in which we
understand the microbial reactions and their effect on the electrochemical
reactions characteristic of corrosion. In addition, we can use electrochemical
and chemical measurements to detect one or more products of these reactions. An
important aspect of quantifying mechanisms of microbially influenced corrosion
is to demonstrate how the microbial reactions interfere with the corrosion
processes and,based on this, identify products of these reactions on the
surfaces of corroding metals using appropriate analytical techniques. The
existence of these products, associated with the increasing corrosion rate, is
used as evidence that the specific mechanism of microbially influenced corrosion
is active. There is no universal mechanism of MIC. Instead, many mechanisms
exist and some of them have been described and quantified better than other.
Therefore, it does not seem reasonable to search for universal mechanisms, but
it does seem reasonable to search for evidence of specific, well-defined
microbial involvement in corrosion of metals.
Lewandowski Z and Beyenal H, "Mechanisms of microbially influenced corrosion," In: Marine and Industrial Biofouling. Edited by Flemming H-C, Murthy PS, Venkatesan R and Cooksey KE,
Springer, 2009; pp. 35-65.
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