Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://localhost:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/5826
Title: Inhibition Effect of Rosmarinus officinalis L. Essential Oil on Environmental Sulfate-Reducing Bacteria induced Corrosion
Authors: Kadum Yakob, Haidar
Mohammed Shartooh, Sufyan
Fadhil Abood, Mohammed
Keywords: SRB
Metal corrosion
Light and scanning electron microscopy
Rosemary oil
Issue Date: Mar-2022
Publisher: ACTA MICROBIOLOGICA BULGARICA
Abstract: Abstract Sulfate-reducing bacteria (SRB)-induced corrosion plays an important role in environmental and technological fields, causing huge economic and ecological damage. This study was carried out to determine the efficacy of Rosmarinus officinalis oil in controlling metal corrosion. Sludge samples were collected from the sulfurous springs in Heet, Anbar governorate, Iraq, to isolate sulfate-reducing bacteria. The samples were enriched using BmA medium under anaerobic conditions. The isolated SRB strain was subjected to biochemical tests and 16S rRNA gene sequencing and identified as Desulfovibrio desulfuricans. One set of the microcosm was sampled every week and the effects of D. desulfuricans on the metal surface were evaluated, in the presence and absence of the essential oil, by using scanning electron microscope. Minimum Inhibitory Concentration and Minimum Bactericidal Concentration of R. officinalis oil against D. desulfuricans were determined at 20 mg/ml, which was sufficient to kill the bacteria in the enrichment medium. The weight loss of the nails which were incubated in the sediment containing D. desulfuricans and R. officinalis oil was significantly lower than those incubated in the presence of D. desulfuricans alone. Scanning electronic microscopic analysis showed that the oil at 20 mg/ml inhibited the formation of biofilm on the nail’s surface. Heavy metal corrosion, cracking and a thick layer of biofilm was observed on the surface of the nail incubated in the sediment without oil treatment. In contrast, addition of R. officinalis oil to the sediment with D. desulfuricans resulted in a lower rate of corrosion and biofilm layers were thinner.
URI: http://localhost:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/5826
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