Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1468373 Corrosion Science 2016 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Peptide nutrients have an inhibitive effect on steel corrosion in semi-solid agar.•This effect appears to be concentration dependent.•Inhibition is due to amine and carboxyl groups on the peptide chains interacting with Fe(II).

A novel system using semi-solid agar with peptide nutrient additions is being developed as a soil analogue for fundamental corrosion studies involving bacteria. Electrochemical studies revealed these nutrients induced an inhibitive effect on the corrosion of carbon steel, hypothesised to be due to activated side chain groups on the peptides. At more anodic potentials variation in the corrosion current suppression was seen with changing nutrient concentration, suggesting concentration dependence of the inhibition process. Knowledge of the electrochemical effect of this system is essential to fully understand the effect of bacteria on carbon steel in the system in the future.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Materials Science Ceramics and Composites
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