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Dive into the research topics where Bart Goderis is active.

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Featured researches published by Bart Goderis.


Green Chemistry | 2010

Sulfonated silica/carbon nanocomposites as novel catalysts for hydrolysis of cellulose to glucose

Stijn Van de Vyver; Li Peng; Jan Geboers; Hans Schepers; Filip de Clippel; Cédric Gommes; Bart Goderis; Pierre A. Jacobs; Bert F. Sels

Sulfonated silica/carbon nanocomposites were successfully developed as reusable, solid acid catalysts for the hydrolytic degradation of cellulose into high yields of glucose.


Biomacromolecules | 2010

Molecular Basis of Processing Wheat Gluten toward Biobased Materials

Bert Lagrain; Bart Goderis; Kristof Brijs; Jan A. Delcour

The unique properties of the wheat grain reside primarily in the gluten-forming storage proteins of its endosperm. Wheat glutens structural and functional properties have led to an expanding diversity of applications in food products. However, its viscoelastic properties and low water solubility also are very interesting features for nonfood applications. Moreover, gluten is annually renewable and perfectly biodegradable. In the processing and setting of gluten containing products, temperature plays a very important role. In this review, the structure and reactivity of gluten are discussed and the importance of sulfhydryl (SH) and disulfide (SS) groups is demonstrated. Wheat gluten aggregation upon thermosetting proceeds through direct covalent cross-linking in and between its protein groups, glutenin and gliadin. Predominant reactions include SH oxidation and SH/SS interchange reactions leading to the formation of SS cross-links. Additionally, thermal treatment of gluten can result in the formation of other than SS covalent bonds. We here review two main technological approaches to make gluten-based materials: wet processes resulting in thin films and dry processes, such as extrusion or compression molding, exploiting the thermoplastic properties of proteins under low moisture conditions and potentially resulting in very useful materials. Gluten bioplastics can also be reinforced with natural fibers, resulting in biocomposites. Although a lot of progress has been made the past decade, the current gluten materials are still outperformed by their synthetic polymer counterparts.


Journal of Polymer Science Part B | 1999

Use of SAXS and linear correlation functions for the determination of the crystallinity and morphology of semi-crystalline polymers. Application to linear polyethylene

Bart Goderis; Harry Reynaers; M. H. J. Koch; Vincent Mathot

The use of correlation functions to obtain the morphological parameters of crystalline-amorphous two-phase lamellar systems is critically reviewed and extended. It is shown that processing of the experimental SAXS-patterns only significantly affects the curvature of the autocorrelation triangle and that the parameters of the corresponding ideal two-phase structure can be determined independently of the data processing procedure. The methods to be used depend on the normalization of the correlation function. The validity of the formulation is illustrated for a sample of linear polyethylene, cooled and heated at 10°C per min. Crystallite thickening during crystallization and surface melting during heating are observed. The overall crystallinity and the fraction of semi-crystalline stacks during crystallization and melting are determined quantitatively as a function of temperature using the total scattering power of the corresponding ideal two-phase structure, correlation functions, and a scaling procedure. Absolute intensities are not required. The SAXS results are confirmed by independent techniques (DSC, WAXD, and SALLS). During crystallization, amorphous regions are present outside the semi-crystalline regions because growing spherulites do not fill space completely. During melting, larger amorphous regions develop in the spherulites because of the complete melting of stacks.


Journal of Polymer Science Part B | 1997

Morphology of homogeneous copolymers of ethene and 1‐octene. I. Influence of thermal history on morphology

M Peeters; Bart Goderis; C Vonk; Harry Reynaers; Vincent Mathot

The morphology of homogeneous copolymers of ethene and 1-octene synthesized using a V-based Ziegler-Natta catalyst was studied as a function of the short chain branching content (SCBC) and the molar mass. Linear polyethylenes (LPE) were used as reference material. For the linear samples an increase in molar mass results in an increase of the long period and the crystalline lamella thickness. A decrease of cooling rate results in an increase of the melting temperature, the long period and the crystalline lamella thickness and an evolution from spherulitic structures to perfectly stacked lamellae. For the branched samples, increasing the SCBC results in a decrease of the melting and the crystallization temperature, crystallinity, spherulite radius, the long period, and the crystalline lamella thickness. The two latter tend to a limiting value on reaching a SCBC of 20CH3/1000C. On the other hand, an increase of the a axis and to a lesser extent the b axis of the unit cell is observed. Decreasing the cooling rate affects only the crystallinity of the least branched samples. Furthermore decreasing the cooling rate results in smaller spherulites, has a minor influence on the lamellar parameters and reduces the dimensions of the basal plane of the unit cell. Increasing the molar mass of the branched samples results in a drop of the crystallinity, a deterioration of the superstructure, enlarges the amorphous layer thickness and the dimensions of the basal plane. All these observations can be accounted for by the different crystallization regimes being applicable when different molar masses, SCBC and cooling rates are used.


Green Chemistry | 2015

Influence of bio-based solvents on the catalytic reductive fractionation of birch wood

Wouter Schutyser; S. Van den Bosch; Tom Renders; T. De Boe; S.-F. Koelewijn; A. Dewaele; Thijs Ennaert; O. Verkinderen; Bart Goderis; Christophe M. Courtin; Bert F. Sels

Reductive catalytic fractionation constitutes a promising approach to separate lignocellulose into a solid carbohydrate pulp and a stable liquid lignin oil. The process is able to extract and convert most of the lignin into soluble mono-, di- and oligomers, while retaining most of the carbohydrates in the pulp. This contribution studies the impact of the solvent choice on both pulp retention and delignification efficiency. Several bio-derivable solvents with varying properties were therefore tested in the Pd/C-catalyzed reductive liquid processing of birch wood. Though a high solvent polarity favors delignification, a too polar solvent like water causes significant solubilization of carbohydrates. A new empirical descriptor, denoted as ‘lignin-first delignification efficiency’ (LFDE), is introduced as a measure of efficient wood processing into soluble lignin derivatives and solid sugar pulp. Of all tested solvents, methanol and ethylene glycol showed the highest LFDE values, and these values could be increased by increasing both reaction time and temperature. Moreover, substantial differences regarding the process characteristics and analyzed product fractions between these two different solvents were discussed extensively. Most striking is the impact of the solvent on the pulp macrostructure, with methanol yielding a pulp composed of aggregated fiber cells, whereas the ethylene glycol pulp comprises nicely separated fiber cells.


Journal of Applied Crystallography | 2010

ConeX: a program for angular calibration and averaging of two-dimensional powder scattering patterns

Cédric Gommes; Bart Goderis

CONEX is a Windows application for converting series of two-dimensional X-ray powder patterns measured on flat two-dimensional detectors into one-dimensional scattering patterns. It is based on the rigorous use of scattering patterns of calibration samples to determine the three-dimensional position of the detector, with respect to the sample and to the beam. This enables correction of the data for geometric distortions, even when the detector is highly tilted and not centred on the beam.


Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2008

Characterization of nanoparticles in diluted clear solutions for Silicalite-1 zeolite synthesis using liquid 29Si NMR, SAXS and DLS

Lana R. A. Follens; Alexander Aerts; Mohamed Haouas; Tom P. Caremans; Benoit Loppinet; Bart Goderis; Jan Vermant; Francis Taulelle; Johan A. Martens; Christine E. A. Kirschhock

Clear solutions for colloidal Silicalite-1 synthesis were prepared by reacting tetraethylorthosilicate in aqueous tetrapropylammonium hydroxide solution. A dilution series with water resulting in clear solutions with a TEOS ratio TPAOH ratio H2O molar ratio of 25 : 9 : 152 up to 25 : 9 : 15,000 was analysed using liquid 29Si nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), synchrotron small angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) and dynamic light scattering (DLS). Particle sizes were derived independently from DLS and from the combination of SAXS and NMR. NMR allowed quantitative characterization of silicon distributed over nanoparticles and dissolved oligomeric silicate polyanions. In all samples studied, the majority of silicon (78-90%) was incorporated in the nanoparticle fraction. In concentrated suspensions, silicate oligomers were mostly double-ring species (D3R, D4R, D5R, D6R). Dilution with water caused their depolymerisation. Contrarily, the internal condensation and size of nanoparticles increased with increasing dilution. SAXS revealed a decrease of effective nanoparticle surface charge upon dilution, reducing the effective particle interactions. With DLS, the reduction of nanoparticle interactions could be confirmed monitoring the collective diffusion mode. The observed evolution of nanoparticle characteristics provides insight in the acceleration of the Silicalite-1 crystallization upon dilution, in view of different crystallization models proposed in the literature.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2009

Thermotropic Ruthenium(II)-Containing Metallomesogens Based on Substituted 1,10-Phenanthroline Ligands

Thomas Cardinaels; Jan Ramaekers; Kris Driesen; Peter Nockemann; Kristof Van Hecke; Luc Van Meervelt; Bart Goderis; Koen Binnemans

Imidazo[4,5-f]-1,10-phenanthroline and pyrazino[2,3-f]-1,10-phenanthroline substituted with long alkyl chains are versatile ligands for the design of metallomesogens because of the ease of ligand substitution. Whereas the ligands and the corresponding rhenium(I) complexes were not liquid-crystalline, mesomorphism was observed for the corresponding ionic ruthenium(II) complexes with chloride, hexafluorophosphate, and bistriflimide counterions. The mesophases were identified as smectic A phases by high-temperature small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) using synchrotron radiation. The transition temperatures depend on the anion, the highest temperatures being observed for the chloride salts and the lowest for the bistriflimide salts. The ruthenium(II) complexes are examples of luminescent ionic liquid crystals.


Macromolecular Rapid Communications | 2015

Simultaneous Synchrotron WAXD and Fast Scanning (Chip) Calorimetry: On the (Isothermal) Crystallization of HDPE and PA11 at High Supercoolings and Cooling Rates up to 200 °C s−1

Dorien Baeten; Vincent Mathot; Thijs F.J. Pijpers; Olivier Verkinderen; Giuseppe Portale; Peter Van Puyvelde; Bart Goderis

An experimental setup, making use of a Flash DSC 1 prototype, is presented in which materials can be studied simultaneously by fast scanning calorimetry (FSC) and synchrotron wide angle X-ray diffraction (WAXD). Accumulation of multiple, identical measurements results in high quality, millisecond WAXD patterns. Patterns at every degree during the crystallization and melting of high density polyethylene at FSC typical scanning rates from 20 up to 200 °C s(-1) are discussed in terms of the temperature and scanning rate dependent material crystallinities and crystal densities. Interestingly, the combined approach reveals FSC thermal lag issues, for which can be corrected. For polyamide 11, isothermal solidification at high supercooling yields a mesomorphic phase in less than a second, whereas at very low supercooling crystals are obtained. At intermediate supercooling, mixtures of mesomorphic and crystalline material are generated at a ratio proportional to the supercooling. This ratio is constant over the isothermal solidification time.


Chemical Communications | 2009

Ethenylene-bridged periodic mesoporous organosilicas with ultra-large mesopores

Carl Vercaemst; Petra E. de Jongh; Johannes D. Meeldijk; Bart Goderis; Francis Verpoort; Pascal Van Der Voort

E-configured ethenylene-bridged periodic mesoporous organosilicas with ultra-large mesopores and unprecedented pore volumes have been developed for the first time.

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Harry Reynaers

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Jan A. Delcour

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Peter Van Puyvelde

Catholic University of Leuven

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Monika Basiura

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Michel H. J. Koch

European Bioinformatics Institute

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Mario Smet

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Imogen Foubert

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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