Literature DB >> 18378604

Microbiology to help solve our energy needs: methanogenesis from oil and the impact of nitrate on the oil-field sulfur cycle.

Alexander Grigoryan1, Gerrit Voordouw.   

Abstract

Our society depends greatly on fossil fuels, and the environmental consequences of this are well known and include significant increases of the CO(2) concentration in the earth's atmosphere. Although microbiology has traditionally played only a minor role in fossil-fuel extraction, two novel key discoveries indicate that this may change. First, the realization that oil components can be converted to methane and CO(2) by methanogenic consortia in the absence of electron acceptors (oxygen, nitrate, sulfate) explains how much of the world's oil has been biodegraded in situ. In addition to inorganic nutrients, only water is needed for these methanogenic conversions. Hence, continued methanogenic biodegradation may have shaped the heavy-oil reservoirs that are so prevalent today. The potential to exploit these reactions, for example, by in situ gasification, is currently being actively investigated. Second, injection of nitrate in oil and gas fields can lower sulfide concentrations. High sulfide concentrations, caused by the action of sulfate-reducing bacteria (SRB), are associated with increased risk of corrosion, reservoir plugging (through precipitated sulfides), and human safety. Nitrate injection into an oil field stimulates subsurface heterotrophic nitrate-reducing bacteria (hNRB) and nitrate-reducing, sulfide-oxidizing bacteria (NR-SOB). Nitrite, formed by these NRB by partial reduction of nitrate, is a strong and specific SRB inhibitor. Nitrate injection has, therefore, promise in positively controlling the oil-field sulfur cycle. There is now more interest in and potential to apply petroleum microbiology than there has been in the past, allowing microbiologists to contribute to a sustainable energy future.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18378604     DOI: 10.1196/annals.1419.004

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ann N Y Acad Sci        ISSN: 0077-8923            Impact factor:   5.691


  4 in total

1.  Thermal effects on microbial composition and microbiologically induced corrosion and mineral precipitation affecting operation of a geothermal plant in a deep saline aquifer.

Authors:  Stephanie Lerm; Anke Westphal; Rona Miethling-Graff; Mashal Alawi; Andrea Seibt; Markus Wolfgramm; Hilke Würdemann
Journal:  Extremophiles       Date:  2013-01-29       Impact factor: 2.395

2.  Acetate production from oil under sulfate-reducing conditions in bioreactors injected with sulfate and nitrate.

Authors:  Cameron M Callbeck; Akhil Agrawal; Gerrit Voordouw
Journal:  Appl Environ Microbiol       Date:  2013-06-14       Impact factor: 4.792

3.  Massive dominance of Epsilonproteobacteria in formation waters from a Canadian oil sands reservoir containing severely biodegraded oil.

Authors:  Casey R J Hubert; Thomas B P Oldenburg; Milovan Fustic; Neil D Gray; Stephen R Larter; Kevin Penn; Arlene K Rowan; Rekha Seshadri; Angela Sherry; Richard Swainsbury; Gerrit Voordouw; Johanna K Voordouw; Ian M Head
Journal:  Environ Microbiol       Date:  2011-08-08       Impact factor: 5.491

4.  Spatial isolation and environmental factors drive distinct bacterial and archaeal communities in different types of petroleum reservoirs in China.

Authors:  Peike Gao; Huimei Tian; Yansen Wang; Yanshu Li; Yan Li; Jinxia Xie; Bing Zeng; Jiefang Zhou; Guoqiang Li; Ting Ma
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2016-02-03       Impact factor: 4.379

  4 in total

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