Standard Practice for Enumeration of Viable Bacteria and Fungi in Liquid Fuels—Filtration and Culture Procedures


Importancia y uso:

5.1 Biodeteriogenic microbes infecting fuel systems typically are most abundant within slime accumulations on system surfaces or at the fuel-water interface (Guide D6469). However, it is often impractical to obtain samples from these locations within fuel systems. Although the numbers of viable bacteria and fungi recovered from fuel-phase samples are likely to be several orders of magnitude smaller than those found in water-phase samples, fuel-phase organisms are often the most readily available indicators of fuel and fuel system microbial contamination.

5.2 Growth Medium Selectivity—Guide E1326 discusses the limitations of growth medium selection. Any medium selected will favor colony formation by some species and suppress colony formation by others. As noted in 6.3, physical, chemical and physiological variables can affect viable cell enumeration test results. Test Method D7463 provides a non-culture means of quantifying microbial biomass in fuels and fuel associated water.

5.3 Since a wide range of sample sizes, or dilutions thereof, can be analyzed by the membrane filter technique (Test Methods D5259 and F1094), the test sensitivity can be adjusted for the population density expected in the sample.

5.4 Enumeration data should be used as part of diagnostic efforts or routine condition monitoring programs. Enumeration data should not be used as fuel quality criteria.

Subcomité:

D02.14

Referida por:

E3152-23, D6469-24, E1259-23, D6469-24, D7847-22, D5465-16R20, D7464-20, D8070-23, D8412-21, D7978-24

Volúmen:

05.03

Número ICS:

75.160.20 (Liquid fuels)

Palabras clave:

bacteria; biodegradation; biodeterioration; colony forming unit; enumeration; fuel microbiology; fungi; membrane filter technique; viable count;

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Norma
D6974

Versión
25

Estatus
Active

Clasificación
Practice

Fecha aprobación
2025-04-01