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Dive into the research topics where F.J. Vergeldt is active.

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Featured researches published by F.J. Vergeldt.


Plant Physiology | 2007

Intact Plant Magnetic Resonance Imaging to Study Dynamics in Long-Distance Sap Flow and Flow-Conducting Surface Area

T.W.J. Scheenen; F.J. Vergeldt; A.M. Heemskerk; H. Van As

Due to the fragile pressure gradients present in the xylem and phloem, methods to study sap flow must be minimally invasive. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) meets this condition. A dedicated MRI method to study sap flow has been applied to quantify long-distance xylem flow and hydraulics in an intact cucumber (Cucumis sativus) plant. The accuracy of this MRI method to quantify sap flow and effective flow-conducting area is demonstrated by measuring the flow characteristics of the water in a virtual slice through the stem and comparing the results with water uptake data and microscopy. The in-plane image resolution of 120 × 120 μm was high enough to distinguish large individual xylem vessels. Cooling the roots of the plant severely inhibited water uptake by the roots and increased the hydraulic resistance of the plant stem. This increase is at least partially due to the formation of embolisms in the xylem vessels. Refilling the larger vessels seems to be a lengthy process. Refilling started in the night after root cooling and continued while neighboring vessels at a distance of not more than 0.4 mm transported an equal amount of water as before root cooling. Relative differences in volume flow in different vascular bundles suggest differences in xylem tension for different vascular bundles. The amount of data and detail that are presented for this single plant demonstrates new possibilities for using MRI in studying the dynamics of long-distance transport in plants.


Photosynthesis Research | 2009

MRI of intact plants.

Henk Van As; Tom W. J. Scheenen; F.J. Vergeldt

Nuclear magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is a non-destructive and non-invasive technique that can be used to acquire two- or even three-dimensional images of intact plants. The information within the images can be manipulated and used to study the dynamics of plant water relations and water transport in the stem, e.g., as a function of environmental (stress) conditions. Non-spatially resolved portable NMR is becoming available to study leaf water content and distribution of water in different (sub-cellular) compartments. These parameters directly relate to stomatal water conductance, CO2 uptake, and photosynthesis. MRI applied on plants is not a straight forward extension of the methods discussed for (bio)medical MRI. This educational review explains the basic physical principles of plant MRI, with a focus on the spatial resolution, factors that determine the spatial resolution, and its unique information for applications in plant water relations that directly relate to plant photosynthetic activity.


Biophysical Journal | 2002

Functional Imaging of Plants: A Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Study of a Cucumber Plant

T.W.J. Scheenen; Anneriet Heemskerk; Andrie de Jager; F.J. Vergeldt; Henk Van As

Functional magnetic resonance imaging was used to study transients of biophysical parameters in a cucumber plant in response to environmental changes. Detailed flow imaging experiments showed the location of xylem and phloem in the stem and the response of the following flow characteristics to the imposed environmental changes: the total amount of water, the amount of stationary and flowing water, the linear velocity of the flowing water, and the volume flow. The total measured volume flow through the plant stem was in good agreement with the independently measured water uptake by the roots. A separate analysis of the flow characteristics for two vascular bundles revealed that changes in volume flow of the xylem sap were accounted for by a change in linear-flow velocities in the xylem vessels. Multiple-spin echo experiments revealed two water fractions for different tissues in the plant stem; the spin-spin relaxation time of the larger fraction of parenchyma tissue in the center of the stem and the vascular tissue was down by 17% in the period after cooling the roots of the plant. This could point to an increased water permeability of the tonoplast membrane of the observed cells in this period of quick recovery from severe water loss.


Magnetic Resonance Imaging | 2000

Evaluation of algorithms for analysis of NMR relaxation decay curves

Louise van der Weerd; F.J. Vergeldt; P. Adrie de Jager; Henk Van As

Quantitative processing of NMR relaxation images depends on the characteristics of the used fitting algorithm. Therefore several common fitting algorithms are compared for decay curves with low signal-to-noise ratios. The use of magnitude data yields a non-zero base line, and is shown to result in an overestimation of the decay time. A simple base line correction is no solution since this yields an equally large underestimation due to overcorrection of the first part of the curve. The use of squared data does yield reliable results, but only in the case of monoexponential decays. The best fitting algorithm under all experimentally occurring conditions turns out to be using real data after phase correction. A phase correction scheme is proposed, which applies to all imaging experiments for which the phase of the pixels is constant over the echo train. This scheme is validated for a phantom and for a tulip bulb.


Chemical Communications | 2013

Controlled mixing of lanthanide(III) ions in coacervate

Junyou Wang; Aldrik H. Velders; Eliana Gianolio; Silvio Aime; F.J. Vergeldt; H. van As; Yan Yun; Markus Drechsler; M.A. Cohen Stuart; J. van der Gucht

This article presents a facile strategy to combine Eu(3+) and Gd(3+) ions into coacervate core micelles in a controlled way with a statistical distribution of the ions. Consequently, the formed micelles show a high tunability between luminescence and relaxivity. These highly stable micelles present great potential for new materials, e.g. as bimodal imaging probes.


Advances in Colloid and Interface Science | 2012

Suspension flow in microfluidic devices — A review of experimental techniques focussing on concentration and velocity gradients

A.M.C. van Dinther; C.G.P.H. Schroën; F.J. Vergeldt; R.G.M. van der Sman; R.M. Boom

Microfluidic devices are an emerging technology for processing suspensions in e.g. medical applications, pharmaceutics and food. Compared to larger scales, particles will be more influenced by migration in microfluidic devices, and this may even be used to facilitate segregation and separation. In order to get most out of these completely new technologies, methods to experimentally measure (or compute) particle migration are needed to gain sufficient insights for rational design. However, the currently available methods only allow limited access to particle behaviour. In this review we compare experimental methods to investigate migration phenomena that can occur in microfluidic systems when operated with natural suspensions, having typical particle diameters of 0.1 to 10 μm. The methods are used to monitor concentration and velocity profiles of bidisperse and polydisperse suspensions, which are notoriously difficult to measure due to the small dimensions of channels and particles. Various methods have been proposed in literature: tomography, ultrasound, and optical analysis, and here we review and evaluate them on general dimensionless numbers related to process conditions and channel dimensions. Besides, eleven practical criteria chosen such that they can also be used for various applications, are used to evaluate the performance of the methods. We found that NMR and CSLM, although expensive, are the most promising techniques to investigate flowing suspensions in microfluidic devices, where one may be preferred over the other depending on the size, concentration and nature of the suspension, the dimensions of the channel, and the information that has to be obtained. The paper concludes with an outlook on future developments of measurement techniques.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2003

Diffusional properties of methanogenic granular sludge: 1H NMR characterization

Piet N.L. Lens; Rakel Gastesi; F.J. Vergeldt; Adriaan C. van Aelst; Antonio G. Pisabarro; Henk Van As

ABSTRACT The diffusive properties of anaerobic methanogenic and sulfidogenic aggregates present in wastewater treatment bioreactors were studied using diffusion analysis by relaxation time-separated pulsed-field gradient nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy and NMR imaging. NMR spectroscopy measurements were performed at 22°C with 10 ml of granular sludge at a magnetic field strength of 0.5 T (20 MHz resonance frequency for protons). Self-diffusion coefficients of H2O in the investigated series of mesophilic aggregates were found to be 51 to 78% lower than the self-diffusion coefficient of free water. Interestingly, self-diffusion coefficients of H2O were independent of the aggregate size for the size fractions investigated. Diffusional transport occurred faster in aggregates growing under nutrient-rich conditions (e.g., the bottom of a reactor) or at high (55°C) temperatures than in aggregates cultivated in nutrient-poor conditions or at low (10°C) temperatures. Exposure of aggregates to 2.5% glutaraldehyde or heat (70 or 90°C for 30 min) modified the diffusional transport up to 20%. In contrast, deactivation of aggregates by HgCl2 did not affect the H2O self-diffusion coefficient in aggregates. Analysis of NMR images of a single aggregate shows that methanogenic aggregates possess a spin-spin relaxation time and self-diffusion coefficient distribution, which are due to both physical (porosity) and chemical (metal sulfide precipitates) factors.


European Biophysics Journal | 2010

Quantitative permeability imaging of plant tissues

Timur A. Sibgatullin; F.J. Vergeldt; Edo Gerkema; Henk Van As

A method for mapping tissue permeability based on time-dependent diffusion measurements is presented. A pulsed field gradient sequence to measure the diffusion encoding time dependence of the diffusion coefficients based on the detection of stimulated spin echoes to enable long diffusion times is combined with a turbo spin echo sequence for fast NMR imaging (MRI). A fitting function is suggested to describe the time dependence of the apparent diffusion constant in porous (bio-)materials, even if the time range of the apparent diffusion coefficient is limited due to relaxation of the magnetization. The method is demonstrated by characterizing anisotropic cell dimensions and permeability on a subpixel level of different tissues of a carrot (Daucus carota) taproot in the radial and axial directions.


Faraday Discussions | 2012

Anomalies in moisture transport during broccoli drying monitored by MRI

X. Jin; Antonius J.B. van Boxtel; Edo Gerkema; F.J. Vergeldt; Henk Van As; Gerrit van Straten; R.M. Boom; Ruud van der Sman

Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) offers unique opportunities to monitor moisture transport during drying or heating of food, which can render unexpected insights. Here, we report about MRI observations made during the drying of broccoli stalks indicating anomalous drying behaviour. In fresh broccoli samples the moisture content in the core of the sample increases during drying, which conflicts with Fickian diffusion. We have put the hypothesis that this increase of moisture is due to the stress diffusion induced by the elastic impermeable skin. Pre-treatments that change skin and bulk elastic properties of broccoli show that our hypothesis of stress-diffusion is plausible.


Langmuir | 2011

Effect of pH on complex coacervate core micelles from Fe(III)-based coordination polymer

Junyou Wang; Arie de Keizer; Herman P. van Leeuwen; Yun Yan; F.J. Vergeldt; Henk Van As; Paul H. H. Bomans; Nico A. J. M. Sommerdijk; Martien A. Cohen Stuart; Jasper van der Gucht

The effect of pH on iron-containing complex coacervate core micelles [Fe(III)-C3Ms] is investigated in this paper. The Fe(III)-C3Ms are formed by mixing cationic poly(N-methyl-2-vinylpyridinium iodide)-b-poly(ethylene oxide) [P2MVP(41)-b-PEO(205)] and anionic iron coordination polymers [Fe(III)-L(2)EO(4)] at stoichiometric charge ratio. Light scattering and Cryo-TEM have been performed to study the variations of hydrodynamic radius and core structure with changing pH. The hydrodynamic radius of Fe(III)-C3Ms is determined mainly by the corona and does not change very much in a broad pH range. However, Cryo-TEM pictures and magnetic relaxation measurements indicate that the structure of the micellar cores changes upon changing the pH, with a more crystalline, elongated shape and lower relaxivity at high pH. We attribute this to the formation of mixed iron complexes in the core, involving both the bis-ligand and hydroxide ions. These complexes are stabilized toward precipitation by the diblock copolymer.

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H. van As

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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Henk Van As

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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Edo Gerkema

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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Piet N.L. Lens

UNESCO-IHE Institute for Water Education

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Carel W. Windt

Forschungszentrum Jülich

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D. van Dusschoten

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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P.A. de Jager

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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R.M. Boom

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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R.G.M. van der Sman

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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T.W.J. Scheenen

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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