Y. Tanji et al., Structural analysis of a biofilm which enhances carbon steel corrosion in nutritionally poor aquatic environments, J BIOSCI BI, 88(5), 1999, pp. 551-556
Carbon steel coupons were exposed to nutritionally-poor synthetic wastewate
r inoculated with activated sludge from a municipal waste water plant. Biof
ilm formation was observed after one day incubation, and the thickness of t
he film increased proportionally with the incubation period. Mass loss of t
he coupons was also proportional to the incubation time, and reached 70.4 (
mg/cm(2)) after incubation for 140 d. The observed mass loss was 5 times as
much as that under sterile conditions. To characterize the microbiological
ly influenced corrosion (MIC) of carbon steel, structural analysis of the b
iofilm was performed. Rapid decrease in the dissolved oxygen (DO) concentra
tion in the zone near the surface of the biofilm was observed by a microele
ctrode mounted on a micromanipulator. Heterogeneous distribution of the DO
concentration on the surface of the steel plate was observed after multiple
analyses. The heterogeneous structure of the biofilm composed of viable ce
lls, inanimate objects, voids and pores was elucidated by confocal scanning
Laser microscopy. Concentrations of both aerobic bacteria and sulphur-redu
cing bacteria in the biofilm decreased with the incubation time, indicating
that the increase in the biofilm thickness reflected an increase in the de
nsity of dead microbial cells or in extracellular polymer accumulation by t
he microbes. The average roughness of the metal surface observed after 112
d of incubation was +/-7.14 mu m, which was 14.1% of the average thickness
of the coupons. These observations indicated that uneven distribution of th
e DO profile and the cell concentration were critical for MIC of the carbon
steel.