Results 261 to 270 of about 207,091 (293)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
Control of Sulfate‐Reducing Bacteria
Journal AWWA, 1965Sulfate‐reducing bacteria have been implicated in numerous instances of damage, as recorded by Postgate. One of the most important of these situations is the corrosion of buried pipelines. Von Wolzogen Kuhr, in 1937, proposed the first widely accepted theory of the corrosion activity of sulfate‐ reducing bacteria. This thesis has been tested by Starkey
openaire +1 more source
Chemosphere, 2008
The roles of fermentative acidogenic bacteria and sulfate-reducing bacteria (SRB) in lactate degradation and sulfate reduction in a sulfidogenic bioreactor were investigated by traditional chemical monitoring and culture-independent methods. A continuously stirred tank reactor fed with synthetic wastewater containing lactate and SO(2-)(4) at 35 degrees
Yangguo, Zhao, Nanqi, Ren, Aijie, Wang
openaire +2 more sources
The roles of fermentative acidogenic bacteria and sulfate-reducing bacteria (SRB) in lactate degradation and sulfate reduction in a sulfidogenic bioreactor were investigated by traditional chemical monitoring and culture-independent methods. A continuously stirred tank reactor fed with synthetic wastewater containing lactate and SO(2-)(4) at 35 degrees
Yangguo, Zhao, Nanqi, Ren, Aijie, Wang
openaire +2 more sources
Genetics of the Sulfate-Reducing Bacteria
1993Genetic studies of sulfate-reducing bacteria have lagged far behind physiological and biochemical investigations. The primary reason for this delay has derived from the strictly anaerobic growth mode of these bacteria and the consequent inability to obtain useful plating efficiencies for quantitation of cell numbers (Postgate et al., 1988).
openaire +1 more source
Sulfate-Reducing Bacteria and Archaea
2014Sulfate-reducing bacteria (SRB) and archaea are widespread in nature and have been found in virtually every anaerobic environment that has been investigated. They play an important role in the global sulfur cycle, and in marine sediments they can account for up to 50% of the total carbon mineralization process.
openaire +1 more source
The Sulfate-Reducing Bacteria: An Overview
1993The intent of this chapter is to review the properties of the sulfate-reducing (occasionally referred to as sulfidogenic) bacteria in general terms to provide a broad framework for the remaining chapters of the book. The chapter is to provide a bridge between material familiar to the general microbiologist reader and the specialized material that makes
openaire +1 more source
pH Regulation by Sulfate-reducing Bacteria
CORROSION 1993, 1993Abstract Consideration of the exact degree of dissociation of all the weak acids involved in bacterial metabolisms shows that the SRB's regulate: the pH of their environment, at levels which depend on the potential secondary reactions: precipitation of FeS, oxidation of HS- to S2O3- - by traces of oxygen, metabolisation of this ...
Jean-Louis Crolet +2 more
openaire +1 more source
Characteristics and Activities of Sulfate-Reducing Bacteria
1995The sulfate-reducing bacteria (SRB) are a unique physiological group of procaryotes because they have the capability of using sulfate as the final electron acceptor in respiration. Initially, these bacteria were treated as biological curiosities and little research effort was devoted to them.
Larry L. Barton, Francisco A. Tomei
openaire +1 more source
Biochemistry, physiology and biotechnology of sulfate-reducing bacteria.
Advances in applied microbiology, 2009Chemolithotrophic bacteria that use sulfate as terminal electron acceptor (sulfate-reducing bacteria) constitute a unique physiological group of microorganisms that couple anaerobic electron transport to ATP synthesis. These bacteria (220 species of 60 genera) can use a large variety of compounds as electron donors and to mediate electron flow they ...
Barton, Larry, Fauque, Guy
openaire +2 more sources
Rapid Enumeration of Sulfate-Reducing Bacteria
CORROSION 2005, 2005Abstract In oilfield systems, the detection of live bacteria is necessary to evaluate the potential for microbially influenced corrosion (MIC), biogenic souring and to evaluate the effectiveness of biocide treatment programs. Biocide is often over-or under-dosed in the absence of timely data to determine viable bacterial concentration in
openaire +1 more source

