Poster Presentations
Posters should be printed smaller than 48”x70”
Session 01 Microbial Induced Corrosion (MIC) and Souring
Inhibition of Sulfate Reduction by Monoflourophosphate in a Flow Through Column System
Anna Engelbrektson – Energy Biosciences Institute, UC Berkeley
Bioelectrical corrosion of iron by marine lithotrophic sulfate-reducing bacteria
Dr. Dennis Enning – ExxonMobil Upstream Research Company
The effect of iron on the potency of nitrate as an inhibitor of sulfidogenesis and oil reservoir souring
Ms. Yi Liu – Energy Biosciences Institute, UC Berkeley
Higher corrosion rates associated with nitrate addition to seawater microcosms
Dr. Julia R. de Rezende – Newcastle University
Mitigating Sulfidogenesis with Simultaneous Perchlorate and Nitrate Treatments
Ms. Anna Engelbrektson – Energy Biosciences Institute, UC Berkeley
Response of thermophilic SRB to nitrate and nitrite under continuous and batch culture conditions
Ms. Gloria Okpala – University of Calgary
Microbial communities involved in high salinity souring and methanogenesis in shale oil fields
Ms. Annie (Biwen) An – University of Calgary
Corrosion of 1010 steel is highest in B20 biodiesel tanks with the greatest bioburden
Dr. Wendy Goodson- Biological Materials and Processing Research Team, Air Force Research Laboratory
Corrosion by acetogenic and methanogenic microorganisms incubated in the presence of oil
Dr. MOHITA SHARMA – University of Calgary
THPS in Oil and Gas Applications – Strengths and Weaknesses
Dr. Kathleen Manna – Dow Microbial Control
Dosage of biocides for effective kill and removal of co-culture biofilms: A Lab-on-a-chip approach
Ms. Susmitha Purnima Kotu – Texas A&M University
Marine corrosion of 1018 carbon steel in the presence of traditional naval petro- and bio-fuel blends
Dr. Zakari Makama – University of Oklahoma, Department of Microbiology and Plant Biology
Expanding the range of biocide actives – Various test results from existing solutions to future alternatives
Mr. Pierre Souquet – Total SA
Bridging the next generation of MIC diagnostic techniques: molecular microbiological methods made accessible by routine ATP field tests
Dr. Marc Demeter – University of Calgary
Detection and Biocide Treatment for Methanogens
Dr. Iris Porat – Kemira Oyj
Preventing Biotic H2S Generation and Souring with Novel Sulphidogenesis-Inhibitory Chemistries
Dr. Brett Geissler – Nalco Champion
Biocidal efficacy against the sulfate reducing bacterium Desulfovibrio alaskensis (DSMZ 16109)
Dr. Lea Holsten – Schülke & Mayr GmbH, Research & Development
Prudent use of Bacteria Management Chemicals in Oil and Gas Production
Dr. James Fajt – Schlumberger Production Technology
Consumption of different organic acids by mixed community of sulfate reducing bacteria
Marcia T.S. Lutterbach from National Institute of Technology (Rio de Janeiro – Brazil)
Beyond the Bug Bottle: Tailored Laboratory Techniques for Selecting and Assessing an Integrated Microbial Control Program
Dr. Joseph Moore – Dow Microbial Control
RNA and Biocorrosion- Collection, transport and extraction standardization of samples from the oil sector
Marcia T.S. Lutterbach from National Institute of Technology (Rio de Janeiro – Brazil)
The Effect of a complex planktonic and biofilm bacterial consortia on marine corrosion of 120 carbon steel
Dr. Zakari Makama – University of Oklahoma, Department of Microbiology and Plant Biology
Rapid In-Field Collection of Corrosion-Related Microbial Samples and Ambient Temperature Stabilization for Downstream Molecular Analysis
Dr. Neil Sharma – InstantLabs
The use of TAED (tetra-acetyl ethylene diamine) as a potential oilfield biocide
Allister Theobald – Warwick Chemicals
Feasibility of bacterial nitrate-reducing metabolism in controlling souring in mature oil wells
Dr. Fabio Chinalia – Federal University of Bahia (presented by Professor Paulo F. Almeida)
Guar gum stimulates biogenic sulfide production at elevated pressures: Implications for shale gas extraction
Leanne Walker, School of Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of Manchester
MIC risk assessment model: new approach to prevent microbial corrosion
Sabine Doddema, Bioclear
Degradation of Biodiesel by Fungi Can Accelerate Carbon Steel Corrosion
Mr. James Floyd – University of Oklahoma, Department of Microbiology and Plant Biology
Session 02 Hydrocarbon Biodegradation
Identification and quantitative detection of hydrocarbon-degrading genes in North Sea water for use with a real-time monitoring device
Dr. Kamila Knapik – International Research Institute of Stavanger
Proteomic analysis of the oil-degrading bacterium Thalassolituus oleivorans MIL-1
Mr. Ben Gregson – University of Essex
Naphthenic acid degradation by Pseudomonas spp. in lab-scale bioreactors
Mr. Karl Skeels – University of Essex
Methanogenic degradation of light and heavy crude oils: Commonalities and distinctions
Ms. Courtney Toth – University of Calgary
Sediment hydrocarbon-degrading bacteria along a depth transect in the Faroe-Shetland Channel
Dr. Evina Gontikaki – University of Aberdeen
Degradation of hydrocarbons by complex bacterial communities isolated from cold deep-sea sediments
Mr. Lloyd Potts – University of Aberdeen
Hydrocarbon Degradation Potential of Environmental Bacterial Communities Exposed to Fuel and the Relevance in Biodeterioration
Dr. Oscar Ruiz – Fuels and Energy Branch, Aerospace Systems Directorate, Air Force Research Laboratory
Fungal Biodiesel Degradation Patterns Predict Contamination Levels in Storage Tanks
Dr. Heather Nunn – University of Oklahoma, Department of Microbiology and Plant Biology
Response of shallow-seawater marine bacteria to oil contamination and to high pressure and low temperature representatives of those under deep-sea conditions
Prof. Diogo Jurelevicius – Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro
Bioremediation of Crude Oil by Indigenous Bacteria in Bohai Bay
Dr. Xiaoke Hu – Key Laboratory of Coastal Biology and Bioresource Utilization, Yantai Institute of Coastal Zone Research, Chinese Academy of Sciences
A PAHs-degrading strain Gordonia sp. Q8 isolated from petroleum contaminated water
Dr. yibin Qi – Petroleum Exploration & Production Research Institute, SINOPEC
The variable influence of dispersant on oil degradation at low temperatures
Evina Gontikaki – University of Aberdeen
Tailoring biostimulation efforts and inoculum sources are key to utilizing previously exposed microbial communities for PAH removal
Dr. Marc Demeter – University of Calgary
Culturable microbiome and biodegradation activity in the diesel B5 and biodiesel (B100) contaminated soil bioremediation
Marcia T.S. Lutterbach from National Institute of Technology (Rio de Janeiro – Brazil)
Session 03 Microbial biotransformations from: Subsurface, Biofuels, to MEOR and Reservoir Microbes
Distributions of thermophilic, endospore-forming bacteria in hydrocarbon seep prospective sediments in the Eastern Gulf of Mexico
Prof. Casey Hubert – University of Calgary
Biodegradation of polymers for enzyme technology applications in oil and gas production
Dr. Carolina Berdugo Clavijo – University of Calgary
Realization of Subsurface methanogenic oil degradation system – Important role of porous environment and nutrients
Mr. Haruo Maeda – INPEX Corporation
Novel mode of methanogenesis by a methanogen isolated from a deep subsurface oil reservoir
Dr. Daisuke Mayumi – AIST
Gaseous hydrocarbon oxidizing bacterial anomalies in topsoil can forecast the existence of subsurface oil and gas deposits
Dr. Lei Gu – Petroleum Exploration & Production Research Institute, SINOPEC
Applicability of Eletromethanogenesis in high pressure and high temperature subsurface reservoir as CCU technology
Mr. Haruo Maeda – INPEX Corporation
Genetic construction of a conditional cellulose production, facultative anaerobic Enterobacter sp. for microbial deeply profile control during water flooding
Ting Ma – Nankai University
Stimulation of Thauera sp. TK001 with isopropanol and acetone under denitrifying conditions for microbial enhanced oil recovery
Dr. Tekle Tafese Fida – University of Calgary
Minority microbial populations alternately dominated and contributed to oil increment during indigenous microbial flooding in a post polymer-flooded oil reservoir
Dr. Peike Gao – Nankai University
Study and Application of Indigenous Microbial Enhanced Oil Recovery Series Techs
Mr. Qingxian Feng – Dagang Oilfield Company, Petrochina
Developing of new low cost organic based nutrients for MEOR and its inhibitory effect on generation of hydrogen sulfate in the cultivation of crude oil and formation water using small test vials
Dr. Nobuhiko Yamashita – Osaka Gas Co., Ltd.
Opportunity and challenge at low oil price situation–Advancement of MEOR Oilfields Trials in China
Dr. lixin huang – Research Institute of Petroleum Exploration and Development
Effects of porous flow on the reservoir-scale petroleum biodegradations in Dagang oil field
Dr. Zhiyong Song – University of Science and Technology Beijing
Evaluation of a Galactomannan Polymer for Enhanced Oil Recovery under High Temperature Reservoir Conditions
Dr. Akhil Agrawal – Central University of Rajasthan
Preliminary study on in-situ real-time quantitation of target microorganisms on the principle of flow cytometry
Mr. Gen Murakami – Kyushu University
Reuse of produced water for simultaneous production of xanthan and rhamnolipids used in enhanced oil recovery
Ms. Bethania Ramos – Federal University of Bahia (presented by Professor Paulo F. Almeida)
A comparative study on microbial growth in renewable diesel substitutes
C. E. Tsesmeli, Fuels and Lubricants Technology Laboratory, Technical University of Athens, 15780 Athens, Greece
Special Session 04 ‘Omics’ technology for the oil and gas industry
The ecological role of Candidate Division OP3 in the MHGC oil field as revealed by omics techniques
Dr. Dongshan An – University of Calgary
Elucidating taxonomy and physiology of the dominant taxa inhabiting petroleum reservoirs based on genome reconstruction
Dr Valeria Maia de Oliveira – University of Campinas
Recovery of partial microbial genomes from metagenomes of Brazilian oil reservoirs
Ms. Daiane Belgini – University of Campinas
Use of transcriptomics and genomics to understand the underlying mechanisms of bacterial adaptation to jet-fuel
Dr. Thusitha Gunasekera – Environmental Microbiology Group, University of Dayton Research Institute, University of Dayton