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Dive into the research topics where Pieter Van Wouwe is active.

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Featured researches published by Pieter Van Wouwe.


Energy and Environmental Science | 2013

Lactic acid as a platform chemical in the biobased economy: the role of chemocatalysis

Michiel Dusselier; Pieter Van Wouwe; Annelies Dewaele; Ekaterina Makshina; Bert F. Sels

Upcoming bio-refineries will be at the heart of the manufacture of future transportation fuels, chemicals and materials. A narrow number of platform molecules are envisioned to bridge natures abundant polysaccharide feedstock to the production of added-value chemicals and intermediate building blocks. Such platform molecules are well-chosen to lie at the base of a large product assortment, while their formation should be straightforward from the refined biomass, practical and energy efficient, without unnecessary loss of carbon atoms. Lactic acid has been identified as one such high potential platform. Despite its established fermentation route, sustainability issues – like gypsum waste and cost factors due to multi-step purification and separation requirements – will arise as soon as the necessary orders of magnitude larger volumes are needed. Innovative production routes to lactic acid and its esters are therefore under development, converting sugars and glycerol in the presence of chemocatalysts. Moreover, catalysis is one of the fundamental routes to convert lactic acid into a range of useful chemicals in a platform approach. This contribution attempts a critical overview of all advances in the field of homogeneous and heterogeneous catalysis and recognises a great potential of some of these chemocatalytic approaches to produce and transform lactic acid as well as some other promising α-hydroxy acids.


Science | 2015

Shape-selective zeolite catalysis for bioplastics production

Michiel Dusselier; Pieter Van Wouwe; Annelies Dewaele; Pierre A. Jacobs; Bert F. Sels

Synthesizing more sustainable plastics Zeolites can help synthesize cheaper plastic precursors from biologically sourced feedstocks. Producing sustainable plastics must compete with more cost-effective petrochemical-based synthesis routes. Dusselier et al. developed a zeolite-based strategy to catalyze the transformation of microbially produced lactic acid into lactide, a difficult-to-synthesize precursor of biodegradable polylactic acid plastics. The selectivity of nearly 80% is based on active site spatial confinement in the zeolite micropores. This step substantially simplifies current high-cost synthesis routes and generates nearly zero waste using current reactor technologies. Science, this issue p. 78 Zeolite catalysts improve the synthesis of the precursors to biodegradable plastics. Biodegradable and renewable polymers, such as polylactic acid, are benign alternatives for petrochemical-based plastics. Current production of polylactic acid via its key building block lactide, the cyclic dimer of lactic acid, is inefficient in terms of energy, time, and feedstock use. We present a direct zeolite-based catalytic process, which converts lactic acid into lactide. The shape-selective properties of zeolites are essential to attain record lactide yields, outperforming those of the current multistep process by avoiding both racemization and side-product formation. The highly productive process is strengthened by facile recovery and practical reactivation of the catalyst, which remains structurally fit during at least six consecutive reactions, and by the ease of solvent and side-product recycling.


Chemcatchem | 2013

Mechanistic Insight into the Conversion of Tetrose Sugars to Novel α‐Hydroxy Acid Platform Molecules

Michiel Dusselier; Pieter Van Wouwe; Filip de Clippel; Jan Dijkmans; David W. Gammon; Bert F. Sels

α‐Hydroxy acids (AHAs) such as lactic acid are considered platform molecules in the biorefinery concept and have high‐end applications in solvents and biodegradable polyester plastics. The synthesis of AHAs with a four‐carbon backbone structure is a recently emerging field. New biomass‐related routes towards their production could stimulate their practical use in new polyester plastics. Herein, we report the unique catalytic activity of soluble tin metal salts for converting tetroses, namely erythrulose and erythrose, into new four‐carbon‐backbone AHAs such as methyl vinylglycolate and methyl‐4‐methoxy‐2‐hydroxybutanoate. An in situ NMR study together with deuterium labeling experiments and control experiments with intermediates allowed us to propose a detailed reaction pathway.


Chemsuschem | 2016

Lactide Synthesis and Chirality Control for Polylactic acid Production.

Pieter Van Wouwe; Michiel Dusselier; Evelien Vanleeuw; Bert F. Sels

Polylactic acid (PLA) is a very promising biodegradable, renewable, and biocompatible polymer. Aside from its production, its application field is also increasing, with use not only in commodity applications but also as durables and in biomedicine. In the current PLA production scheme, the most expensive part is not the polymerization itself but obtaining the building blocks lactic acid (LA) and lactide, the actual cyclic monomer for polymerization. Although the synthesis of LA and the polymerization have been studied systematically, reports of lactide synthesis are scarce. Most lactide synthesis methods are described in patent literature, and current energy-intensive, aselective industrial processes are based on archaic scientific literature. This Review, therefore, highlights new methods with a technical comparison and description of the different approaches. Water-removal methodologies are compared, as this is a crucial factor in PLA production. Apart from the synthesis of lactide, this Review also emphasizes the use of chemically produced racemic lactic acid (esters) as a starting point in the PLA production scheme. Stereochemically tailored PLA can be produced according to such a strategy, giving access to various polymer properties.


ACS Catalysis | 2013

Toward Functional Polyester Building Blocks from Renewable Glycolaldehyde with Sn Cascade Catalysis

Michiel Dusselier; Pieter Van Wouwe; Sanne De Smet; Rik De Clercq; Leander Verbelen; Peter Van Puyvelde; Filip Du Prez; Bert F. Sels


Archive | 2017

PROCÉDÉ DE PRODUCTION DE LACTIDE EN UNE SEULE ÉTAPE AVEC ENTRÉE DISTINCTE POUR LE SOLVANT

Mahdi Yazdanpanah; Jamal Chaouki; Pieter Van Wouwe; Bert Sels


Abstracts of Papers of the American Chemical Society | 2014

Bridging racemic lactate esters with stereoselective polylactic acid using commercial lipase catalysis

Pieter Van Wouwe; Michiel Dusselier; Aurelie Basiç; Bert Sels


Abstracts of Papers of the American Chemical Society | 2014

Novel bio-derived building blocks and their application in polymer chemistry

Michiel Dusselier; Filip de Clippel; Pieter Van Wouwe; Peter Van Puyvelde; Filip Du Prez; Bert F. Sels


Abstracts of Papers of the American Chemical Society | 2014

Conversion of cellulose to lactates and other alpha-hydroxy esters: Catalytic insight into the cascade reaction

Michiel Dusselier; Pieter Van Wouwe; Rik De Clercq; Sanne De Smet; Peter Van Puyvelde; Filip Du Prez; Bert F. Sels


Archive | 2013

Mechanistic insight into the Sn catalyzed conversion of tetrose sugars to novel alpha-hydroxy acid platform molecules

Michiel Dusselier; Pieter Van Wouwe; Filip de Clippel; Jan Dijkmans; David W. Gammon; Bert Sels

Collaboration


Dive into the Pieter Van Wouwe's collaboration.

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Michiel Dusselier

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Bert F. Sels

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Filip de Clippel

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Jan Dijkmans

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Bert Sels

Council of Scientific and Industrial Research

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Peter Van Puyvelde

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Annelies Dewaele

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Rik De Clercq

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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