Parker Gabriel D, Plymale Andrew, Ievlev Anton, Zhu Zihua, Hager Jacqueline, Hanley Luke, Yu Xiao-Ying
University of Illinois Chicago, Department of Chemistry, Chicago, Illinois 60607, United States.
Material Science and Technology Division, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, Tennessee 37830, United States.
Anal Chem. 2025 Jul 8;97(26):13872-13880. doi: 10.1021/acs.analchem.5c01183. Epub 2025 Jun 24.
Microbially induced corrosion (MIC) focuses on the degradation of solid materials, such as glass or metal. Soil microbes are often associated with the corrosion of foreign objects in the rhizosphere. SCE2, a facultative anaerobic bacterium in soil, is of the same genus as bacteria found near nuclear waste disposal sites. Time-of-flight secondary ion mass spectrometry (ToF-SIMS) was used for imaging surface changes induced by SCE2 cultured on two synthetic glass coupons to represent natural analogs of materials that were studied in relation to the vitrification of nuclear waste. Multimodal imaging was used to verify bacterial coverage across the glass surface after long-term growth. ToF-SIMS spectral analysis showed detection of glass component ions, such as silicon oxide / 59.96 SiO) and aluminum oxide (/ 101.95 AlO), and biofilm's extracellular polymeric substance (EPS) components, such as pentadecanoic acid (/ 241.22 CHO) and sterol lipids (/ 311.16 CHO). ToF-SIMS spectral, imaging, and depth profiling analyses showed that the glass rich in silica and other light elements ("granite glass") had more "corrosion related" peaks than the glass that was less silica-rich and contained more iron ("dike glass"). These surface and interface compositional and spatial differences observed in the mass spectra and imaging were attributed to bacterial metabolism and an electron transfer mechanism influenced by morphological and compositional differences between the two types of glasses. ToF-SIMS is effective in studying microbial effects, bringing new molecular insights into MIC in a broader context of materials degradation.
微生物诱导腐蚀(MIC)主要关注固体材料(如玻璃或金属)的降解。土壤微生物常常与根际中外来物体的腐蚀相关。SCE2是土壤中的一种兼性厌氧菌,与在核废料处置场附近发现的细菌属于同一属。飞行时间二次离子质谱(ToF-SIMS)用于对在两个合成玻璃试样上培养的SCE2诱导的表面变化进行成像,以代表与核废料玻璃化相关研究的材料的天然类似物。多模态成像用于验证长期生长后细菌在玻璃表面的覆盖情况。ToF-SIMS光谱分析显示检测到玻璃成分离子,如氧化硅(/ 59.96 SiO)和氧化铝(/ 101.95 AlO),以及生物膜的细胞外聚合物(EPS)成分,如十五烷酸(/ 241.22 CHO)和甾醇脂质(/ 311.16 CHO)。ToF-SIMS光谱、成像和深度剖析分析表明,富含二氧化硅和其他轻元素的玻璃(“花岗岩玻璃”)比富含二氧化硅较少且含铁较多的玻璃(“岩脉玻璃”)有更多“与腐蚀相关”的峰。在质谱和成像中观察到的这些表面和界面成分及空间差异归因于细菌代谢以及受两种玻璃形态和成分差异影响的电子转移机制。ToF-SIMS在研究微生物效应方面很有效,在更广泛的材料降解背景下为微生物诱导腐蚀带来了新的分子见解。