Abstract

Microbiologically influenced corrosion (MIC) of carbon steel by sulfate reducing bacterium (SRB) Desulfovibrio vulgaris under organic carbon starvation was investigated using electrochemical methods to support weight loss and pitting data. 20% carbon source led to the highest weight loss (6.6 mg/cm2), while 100% had the lowest (3.3 mg/cm2) after 10 days. Linear polarization resistance and electrochemical impedance spectrometry data confirmed the weight loss and pitting data trends. The data in this work support the theory that carbon steel corrosion by SRB is due to electron harvest from extracellular iron oxidation by SRB, which belongs to extracellular electron transfer MIC (EET-MIC).

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