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Impact of oxygen release from bentonite on microbial activity, mineralogy, and steel corrosion

Impact of oxygen release from bentonite on microbial activity, mineralogy, and steel corrosion

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Authors

Natalia Jakus , Pranav Vivek Kulkarni, Carolin L. Dreher, Sylvie Bruggmann, Daniel Grolimund, Andreas Kappler, Nikitas Diomidis, Stefano Mischler, Rizlan Bernier-Latmani

Abstract

Deep geological repositories for the disposal of radioactive waste rely partly on the integrity of canisters and on the inhibition of microbial growth by the bentonite barrier for the effective isolation of the waste from the environment. Canister integrity can be compromised by the activity of sulfate-reducing bacteria (SRB) and by abiotic corrosion. Unexpected aerobic microbial growth and SRB inhibition under anoxic conditions were observed in bentonite during a recent long-term in-situ experiment. It raised the possibility that residual O₂ may delay anaerobic growth. Here, to investigate the role of O₂, bentonite was equilibrated with 0, 21, or 100% O₂, compacted to 1.25 g/cm³, and deployed in a borehole for 1.5 years. Analyses revealed that the higher the O₂ concentration in bentonite, the greater the biomass and the more Desulfatitalea sp. dominates the SRB population. The thickest corrosion layer product of carbon steel was found in the 21% O₂ case, reflecting ongoing aerobic and anaerobic processes. In contrast, the most extensive structural Fe(III) reduction within montmorillonite was observed at 0% O₂. These findings demonstrate that residual bentonite O₂ shapes microbial activity and alters corrosion dynamics, highlighting the importance of accounting for oxygen during early repository evolution.

DOI

https://doi.org/10.31223/X5FJ0Z

Subjects

Civil Engineering, Environmental Engineering, Environmental Microbiology and Microbial Ecology Life Sciences, Geochemistry

Keywords

MX80, backfill, residual oxygen, anaerobic corrosion, aerobic corrosion, sulfate-reducing bacteria (SRB), carbon steel, deep geological repository (DGR)

Dates

Published: 2025-07-19 20:59

Last Updated: 2025-07-19 20:59

License

CC BY Attribution 4.0 International

Additional Metadata

Conflict of interest statement:
None