Abstract
Tests were carried out in five light fuel oil storage tanks placed outdoors in the vicinity of Stockholm, Sweden, to study the effectiveness of some commercially available corrosion inhibitors in the presence of certain micro-organisms. Corrosion in the aqueous phase caused by Desulphovibrio desulphuricans, Thiobacillus ferro-oxidans and Cladosporium resinae was effectively stopped by the addition of a sodium nitrite-sodium tetraborate mixture, but was enhanced by each of three commercial oil-soluble inhibitors. In some cases the corrosion rate exceeded 3 mm/year. The results are of a preliminary nature, but give cause for alarm and suggest the need for further investigation.
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