Splashes in a sewer trigger chain reactions that utilities battle every day.

Hydrogen sulfide begins in the slime layer of sewer pipes — but when fast-moving flow splashes or drops, that disturbance releases the gas into the air, where it becomes odorous, corrosive, and dangerous.

Understanding this splash-activated chemistry is central to designing systems that prevent gas release and protect infrastructure, explains Kerry Koressel of IPEX.

Episode at https://bit.ly/SewerCorrosion

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