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Showing papers on "Biofilm matrix published in 1985"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A sintered glass bead core is used to simulate the spaces and surfaces of reservoir rock in studies of the bacterial plugging phenomenon that affects waterflood oil recovery operations and the presence of particles in the water rapidly decreased the core permeability.
Abstract: We have used a sintered glass bead core to simulate the spaces and surfaces of reservoir rock in studies of the bacterial plugging phenomenon that affects waterflood oil recovery operations. The passage of pure or mixed natural populations of bacteria through this solid matrix was initially seen to promote the formation of adherent bacterial microcolonies on available surfaces. Bacteria within these microcolonies produced huge amounts of exopolysaccharides and coalesced to form a confluent plugging biofilm that eventually caused a >99% decrease in core permeability. Aerobic bacteria developed a plugging biofilm on the inlet face of the core, facultative anaerobes plugged throughout the core, and dead bacteria did not effectively plug the narrow (33-μm) spaces of this solid matrix because they neither adhered extensively to surfaces nor produced the extensive exopolysaccharides characteristic of living cells. The presence of particles in the water used in these experiments rapidly decreased the core permeability because they became trapped in the developing biofilm and accelerated the plugging of pore spaces. Once established, cells within the bacterial biofilm could be killed by treatment with a biocide (isothiazalone), but their essentially inert carbohydrate biofilm matrix persisted and continued to plug the pore spaces, whereas treatment with 5% sodium hypochlorite killed the bacteria, dissolved the exopolysaccharide biofilm matrix, and restored permeability to these plugged glass bead cores.

155 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the diffusion coefficients of three different chemical species in naturally grown, heterotrophic biofilms have been measured and a simple model of mass transfer in a biofilm matrix is developed.

143 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The protective glycocalyx-enclosed microcolonial mode of bacterial growth also may explain the relative resistance to antibiotics observed in bacteria associated with infection stones.

52 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the diffusion coefficient of three different chemical species in naturally grown, heterotrophic biofilms have been measured, and the influence of the diffusion potential and the donnan potential on the ions have been evaluated by comparing the diffusion coefficients of a positively and negatively charged ion and a neutral molecule in experiments with different background electrolyte concentrations.

30 citations