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Dive into the research topics where Ludo Diels is active.

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Featured researches published by Ludo Diels.


Bioresource Technology | 2010

A review of the substrates used in microbial fuel cells (MFCs) for sustainable energy production.

Deepak Pant; Gilbert Van Bogaert; Ludo Diels; Karolien Vanbroekhoven

Microbial fuel cells (MFCs) have gained a lot of attention in recent years as a mode of converting organic waste including low-strength wastewaters and lignocellulosic biomass into electricity. Microbial production of electricity may become an important form of bioenergy in future because MFCs offer the possibility of extracting electric current from a wide range of soluble or dissolved complex organic wastes and renewable biomass. A large number of substrates have been explored as feed. The major substrates that have been tried include various kinds of artificial and real wastewaters and lignocellulosic biomass. Though the current and power yields are relatively low at present, it is expected that with improvements in technology and knowledge about these unique systems, the amount of electric current (and electric power) which can be extracted from these systems will increase tremendously providing a sustainable way of directly converting lignocellulosic biomass or wastewaters to useful energy. This article reviews the various substrates that have been explored in MFCs so far, their resulting performance, limitations as well as future potential substrates.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2000

Isolation of Adherent Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbon (PAH)-Degrading Bacteria Using PAH-Sorbing Carriers

Leen Bastiaens; Dirk Springael; Pierre Wattiau; Hauke Harms; Rupert deWachter; Hubert Verachtert; Ludo Diels

ABSTRACT Two different procedures were compared to isolate polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH)-utilizing bacteria from PAH-contaminated soil and sludge samples, i.e., (i) shaken enrichment cultures in liquid mineral medium in which PAHs were supplied as crystals and (ii) a new method in which PAH degraders were enriched on and recovered from hydrophobic membranes containing sorbed PAHs. Both techniques were successful, but selected from the same source different bacterial strains able to grow on PAHs as the sole source of carbon and energy. The liquid enrichment mainly selected for Sphingomonasspp., whereas the membrane method exclusively led to the selection ofMycobacterium spp. Furthermore, in separate membrane enrichment set-ups with different membrane types, three repetitive extragenic palindromic PCR-related Mycobacterium strains were recovered. The new Mycobacterium isolates were strongly hydrophobic and displayed the capacity to adhere strongly to different surfaces. One strain, Mycobacterium sp. LB501T, displayed an unusual combination of high adhesion efficiency and an extremely high negative charge. This strain may represent a new bacterial species as suggested by 16S rRNA gene sequence analysis. These results indicate that the provision of hydrophobic sorbents containing sorbed PAHs in the enrichment procedure discriminated in favor of certain bacterial characteristics. The new isolation method is appropriate to select for adherent PAH-degrading bacteria, which might be useful to biodegrade sorbed PAHs in soils and sludge.


RSC Advances | 2012

Bioelectrochemical systems (BES) for sustainable energy production and product recovery from organic wastes and industrial wastewaters

Deepak Pant; Anoop Singh; Gilbert Van Bogaert; Stig Irving Olsen; Poonam Singh Nee Nigam; Ludo Diels; Karolien Vanbroekhoven

Bioelectrochemical systems (BESs) are unique systems capable of converting the chemical energy of organic waste including low-strength wastewaters and lignocellulosic biomass into electricity or hydrogen/chemical products in microbial fuel cells (MFCs) or microbial electrolysis cells (MECs) respectively, or other products formed at the cathode by an electrochemical reduction process. As compared to conventional fuel cells, BESs operate under relatively mild conditions, use a wide variety of organic substrates and mostly do not use expensive precious metals as catalysts. The recently discovered use of BES for product synthesis via microbial electrosynthesis have greatly expanded the horizon for these systems. Newer concepts in application as well as development of alternative materials for electrodes, separators, and catalysts, along with innovative designs have made BESs very promising technologies. This article discusses the recent developments that have been made in BESs so far, with an emphasis on their various applications beyond electricity generation, resulting performances and current limitations.


Journal of Industrial Microbiology & Biotechnology | 1995

The Czc Operon of Alcaligenes-Eutrophus Ch34 - from Resistance Mechanism to the Removal of Heavy-Metals:

Ludo Diels; Qinghan Dong; Daniel van der Lelie; Wilfried Baeyens; Max Mergeay

SummaryThe plasmid-borneczc operon ensures for resistance to Cd2+, Zn2+ and Co2+ ions through a tricomponent export pathway and is associated to various conjugative plasmids ofA. eutrophus strains isolated from metal-contaminated industrial areas. Theczc region of pMOL30 was reassessed especially for the segments located upstream and downstream the structural genesczc CBA. In cultures grown with high concentrations of heavy metals,czc-mediated efflux of cations is followed by a process of metal bioprecipitation. These observations led to the development of bioreactors designed for the removal of heavy metals from polluted effluents.


Reviews in Environmental Science and Bio\/technology | 2002

New developments in treatment of heavy metal contaminated soils

Ludo Diels; N. van der Lelie; L. Bastiaens

Contamination of soil and groundwater by heavymetals is a widespread problem due to theformer activities of metal processing, sufracetreatment and mining industry and theuncontrolled dumping of waste in landfills.Several methods do exist to treat soil andgroundwater. This paper will pay attention tosome new developed methods based on removal ofthe metals from the soil (simultaneousextraction and binding to biomass) or thegorundwater (aboveground treatment by sulphatereducing bacteria). Due to the fact that veryoften large areas are affected by heavy metalcontamination a removal is difficult. Thereforesome methods are developed to keep the metalsin the soil but reduce the risks related tothis presence. This risk reduction is based ona decrease in bioavailability by in situimmobilisation processes. These in situimmobilisation processes allow the treatment oflarge diffusely contaminated areas. Twoapproaches are presented. The first approach isbased on the addition of soil additives toimmobilize the metals. In this case specialattention is paid to the the biologicalevaluation methods of the reduction in metalbioavailability. The second approach uses againSRBs for the in situ precipitation ofmetal sulphides.


Journal of Environmental Engineering and Landscape Management | 2010

Phytoremediation for heavy metal-contaminated soils combined with bioenergy production

Luc Van Ginneken; Erik Meers; Ruben Guisson; Ann Ruttens; Kathy Elst; Filip Tack; Jaco Vangronsveld; Ludo Diels; Winnie Dejonghe

Abstract In June 2007, a project started in Flanders (Belgium) in which we will apply phytoremediation to clean soils that are diffusely polluted with heavy metals. Uptake ranges of heavy metals by rape seed, maize and wheat will be enhanced by increasing the bioavailability of these heavy metals by the addition of biodegradable physico‐chemical agents and by stimulating the heavy‐metal uptake capacity of the microbial community in and around the plant. In addition, the harvested biomass crops will be converted into bioenergy by using different energy‐recovery‐techniques. The energy and heavy metal mass balances will be compared for four different energy‐recovery techniques (anaerobic digestion, incineration, gasification and production of biodiesel). The overall information obtained will result in an economic evaluation of the use of phytoremediation combined with bioenergy production for the remediation of sites which are diffusely polluted with heavy metals. In the present review we will first explain ...


Water Research | 2011

Biodiversity and population dynamics of microorganisms in a full-scale membrane bioreactor for municipal wastewater treatment

Cai-Yun Wan; Heleen De Wever; Ludo Diels; Chris Thoeye; Jun-Bin Liang; Li-Nan Huang

The total, ammonia-oxidizing, and denitrifying Bacteria in a full-scale membrane bioreactor (MBR) were evaluated monthly for over one year. Microbial communities were analyzed by denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE) and clone library analysis of the 16S rRNA and ammonia monooxygenase (amoA) and nitrous oxide reductase (nosZ) genes. The community fingerprints obtained were compared to those from a conventional activated sludge (CAS) process running in parallel treating the same domestic wastewater. Distinct DGGE profiles for all three molecular markers were observed between the two treatment systems, indicating the selection of specific bacterial populations by the contrasting environmental and operational conditions. Comparative 16S rRNA sequencing indicated a diverse bacterial community in the MBR, with phylotypes from the α- and β-Proteobacteria and Bacteroidetes dominating the gene library. The vast majority of sequences retrieved were not closely related to classified organisms or displayed relatively low levels of similarity with any known 16S rRNA gene sequences and thus represent organisms that constitute new taxa. Similarly, the majority of the recovered nosZ sequences were novel and only moderately related to known denitrifiers from the α- and β-Proteobacteria. In contrast, analysis of the amoA gene showed a remarkably simple ammonia-oxidizing community with the detected members almost exclusively affiliated with the Nitrosomonas oligotropha lineage. Major shifts in total bacteria and denitrifying community were detected and these were associated with change in the external carbon added for denitrification enhancement. In spite of this, the MBR was able to maintain a stable process performance during that period. These results significantly expand our knowledge of the biodiversity and population dynamics of microorganisms in MBRs for wastewater treatment.


Bioresource Technology | 2012

Integrated bioprocess for long-term continuous cultivation of Clostridium acetobutylicum coupled to pervaporation with PDMS composite membranes.

Wouter Van Hecke; Pieter Vandezande; Stan Claes; Silvia Vangeel; Herman Beckers; Ludo Diels; Heleen De Wever

A continuous cultivation of Clostridium acetobutylicum ATCC 824 is described using a two-stage design to mimic the two phases of batch culture growth of the organism. A hydrophobic pervaporation unit was coupled to the second fermentor containing the highest solvent titers. This in situ product recovery technology efficiently decreased butanol toxicity in the fermentor while the permeate was enriched to 57-195 g L(-1) total solvents depending on the solvent concentrations in the fermentor. By the alleviation of product inhibition, the glucose concentration could be increased from 60 to 126 g L(-1) while the productivity increased concomitantly from 0.13 to 0.30 g L(-1)h(-1). The continuous fermentation was conducted for 1172 h during which the pervaporation was coupled to the second fermentor for 475 h with an average flux of 367 g m(-2)h(-1). The energy consumption was calculated for a 2 wt.% n-butanol fermentation broth and compared with the conventional process.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2005

Dynamics of an Oligotrophic Bacterial Aquifer Community during Contact with a Groundwater Plume Contaminated with Benzene, Toluene, Ethylbenzene, and Xylenes: an In Situ Mesocosm Study

Barbara Hendrickx; Winnie Dejonghe; Wesley Boënne; Maria Brennerova; Miroslav Černík; Tomáš Lederer; Margarete Bucheli-Witschel; Leen Bastiaens; Willy Verstraete; Eva M. Top; Ludo Diels; Dirk Springael

ABSTRACT An in situ mesocosm system was designed to monitor the in situ dynamics of the microbial community in polluted aquifers. The mesocosm system consists of a permeable membrane pocket filled with aquifer material and placed within a polypropylene holder, which is inserted below groundwater level in a monitoring well. After a specific time period, the microcosm is recovered from the well and its bacterial community is analyzed. Using this system, we examined the effect of benzene, toluene, ethylbenzene, and xylene (BTEX) contamination on the response of an aquifer bacterial community by denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis analysis of PCR-amplified 16S rRNA genes and PCR detection of BTEX degradation genes. Mesocosms were filled with nonsterile or sterile aquifer material derived from an uncontaminated area and positioned in a well located in either the uncontaminated area or a nearby contaminated area. In the contaminated area, the bacterial community in the microcosms rapidly evolved into a stable community identical to that in the adjacent aquifer but different from that in the uncontaminated area. At the contaminated location, bacteria with tmoA- and xylM/xylE1-like BTEX catabolic genotypes colonized the aquifer, while at the uncontaminated location only tmoA-like genotypes were detected. The communities in the mesocosms and in the aquifer adjacent to the wells in the contaminated area consisted mainly of Proteobacteria. At the uncontaminated location, Actinobacteria and Proteobacteria were found. Our results indicate that communities with long-term stability in their structures follow the contamination plume and rapidly colonize downstream areas upon contamination.


Environmental Science & Technology | 2013

Valorization of Cereal Based Biorefinery Byproducts:Reality and Expectations

Ahmed ElMekawy; Ludo Diels; Heleen De Wever; Deepak Pant

The growth of the biobased economy will lead to an increase in new biorefinery activities. All biorefineries face the regular challenges of efficiently and economically treating their effluent to be compatible with local discharge requirements and to minimize net water consumption. The amount of wastes resulting from biorefineries industry is exponentially growing. The valorization of such wastes has drawn considerable attention with respect to resources with an observable economic and environmental concern. This has been a promising field which shows great prospective toward byproduct usage and increasing value obtained from the biorefinery. However, full-scale realization of biorefinery wastes valorization is not straightforward because several microbiological, technological and economic challenges need to be resolved. In this review we considered valorization options for cereals based biorefineries wastes while identifying their challenges and exploring the opportunities for future process.

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Leen Bastiaens

Flemish Institute for Technological Research

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Dirk Springael

Catholic University of Leuven

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Karolien Vanbroekhoven

Flemish Institute for Technological Research

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Deepak Pant

Flemish Institute for Technological Research

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Max Mergeay

Flemish Institute for Technological Research

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Winnie Dejonghe

Flemish Institute for Technological Research

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Jan Dries

Flemish Institute for Technological Research

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Spiros N. Agathos

Université catholique de Louvain

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Gilbert Van Bogaert

Flemish Institute for Technological Research

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