Nitrite as a causal factor for nitrate-dependent anaerobic corrosion of
metallic iron induced by Prolixibacter strains
Abstract
Microbially influenced corrosion (MIC) may contribute significantly to
overall corrosion risks, especially in the gas and petroleum industries.
In this study, we isolated four Prolixibacter strains, which belong to
the phylum Bacteroidetes, and examined their nitrate-respiration- and
Fe0-corroding activities, together with two previously isolated
Prolixibacter strains. Four of the six Prolixibacter strains reduced
nitrate under anaerobic conditions, while the other two strains did not.
The anaerobic growth of the four nitrate-reducing strains was enhanced
by nitrate, which was not observed in the two nitrate-non-reducing
strains. When the nitrate-reducing strains were grown anaerobically in
the presence of Fe0 or carbon steel, the corrosion of the materials was
enhanced by more than 20-fold compared to that in aseptic controls. This
enhancement was not observed in cultures of the nitrate-non-reducing
strains. The oxidation of Fe0 in the anaerobic cultures of
nitrate-reducing strains occurred concomitantly with the reduction of
nitrite. Since nitrite chemically oxidized Fe0 under anaerobic and
aseptic conditions, the corrosion of Fe0- and carbon-steel by the
nitrate-reducing Prolixibacter strains was deduced to be mainly enhanced
via the biological reduction of nitrate to nitrite, followed by the
chemical oxidation of Fe0 to Fe2+ and Fe3+ coupled to the reduction of
nitrite.