Dissolved free sulfides (H2S, HS− and S2−) are very aggressive species for the corrosion of many metals such as steel, stainless steel, and copper. Sulfides present in aqueous solution are responsible for
stress corrosion cracking (SCC) of steel, and is also known as
sulfide stress cracking. Corrosion is a major concern in many industrial installations processing sulfides: sulfide ore mills, deep
oil wells, pipelines transporting soured
oil and
Kraft paper factories.
Microbially-induced corrosion (MIC) or
biogenic sulfide corrosion are also caused by
sulfate reducing bacteria producing sulfide that is emitted in the air and oxidized in sulfuric acid by sulfur oxidizing bacteria. Biogenic sulfuric acid reacts with
sewerage materials and most generally causes mass loss, cracking of the sewer pipes and ultimately, structural collapse. This kind of deterioration is a major process affecting sewer systems worldwide and leading to very high rehabilitation costs. Oxidation of sulfide can also form
thiosulfate (), an intermediate species responsible for severe problems of
pitting corrosion of steel and stainless steel while the medium is also acidified by the production of sulfuric acid when oxidation is more advanced. ==Organic chemistry==