Ruxandra Cimpoia
National Research Council
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Featured researches published by Ruxandra Cimpoia.
Bioremediation Journal | 2003
Laleh Yerushalmi; Sylvie Rocheleau; Ruxandra Cimpoia; Manon Sarrazin; Geoffrey I. Sunahara; Adriana Peisajovich; Gervais Leclair; Serge R. Guiot
Soil samples taken from a contaminated site in Northern Quebec, Canada, exhibited a low capacity for biodegradation of total petroleum hydrocarbons (TPH), despite a high capacity for the mineralization of aromatic hydrocarbons and a low toxicity of soil leachates as measured by Microtox assay. Toxicity assays directly performed on surface soil, including earthworm mortality and barley seedling emergence, indicated moderate to high levels of toxicity. Soil biostimulation did not improve the removal of petroleum hydrocarbons, while bioaugmentation of soil with a developed enrichment culture increased the efficiency of hydrocarbon removal from 20.4% to 49.2%. A considerable increase in the removal of TPH was obtained in a bioslurry process, enhancing the mass transfer of hydrocarbons from soil to the aqueous phase and increasing the efficiency of hydrocarbon removal to over 70% after 45 days of incubation. The addition of ionic or nonionic surfactants did not have a significant impact on biodegradation of hydrocarbons. The extent of hydrocarbon mineralization during the bioslurry process after 45 days of incubation ranged from 41.3% to 58.9%, indicating that 62.7% to 83.1% of the eliminated TPH were transformed into CO2 and water.
Environmental Science & Technology | 2011
Serge R. Guiot; Ruxandra Cimpoia; Gaël Carayon
Gasification of biomass produces a mixture of gas (mainly carbon monoxide (CO), carbon dioxide (CO(2)), and hydrogen (H(2))) called synthesis gas, or syngas, by thermal degradation without combustion. Syngas can be used for heat or electricity production by thermochemical processes. This project aims at developing an alternative way to bioupgrade syngas into biogas (mainly methane), via anaerobic fermentation. Nonacclimated industrial granular sludge to be used as reactor inoculum was initially evaluated for mesophilic carboxydotrophic methanogenesis potential in batch tests at 4 and 8 mmol CO/g VSS.d, in the absence and presence of H(2) and CO(2), respectively. Granular sludge was then introduced into a 30 L gas-lift reactor and supplied with CO, to study the production of methane and other metabolites, at different gas dilutions as well as feeding and recirculation rates. A maximal CO conversion efficiency of 75%, which was gas-liquid mass transfer limited, occurred at a CO partial pressure of 0.6 atm combined with a gas recirculation ratio of 20:1. The anaerobic granule potential for methanogenesis from CO was likely hydrogenotrophic, combined with CO-dependent H(2) formation, either under mesophilic or thermophilic conditions. Thermophilic conditions provide the anaerobic granules with a CO-bioconversion potential significantly larger (5-fold) than under mesophilic conditions, so long as the gas-liquid transfer is alleviated.
Bioremediation Journal | 1999
Sylvie Rocheleau; Ruxandra Cimpoia; Louise Paquet; Iris van Koppen; Serge R. Guiot; Jalal Hawari; Guy Ampleman; Sonia Thiboutot; Geoffrey I. Sunahara
The ecotoxicological effects of four bioslurry reactors treating 2,4,6-trinitotoluene (TNT)- and 1,3,5-trinitro-1,3,5-triazacyclohexane (RDX)-spiked soil were evaluated. A control bioslurry reactor was used to assess the endogenous toxicity of the bioslurry operation conditions. A battery of ecotoxicity tests was used: Microtox, green algae growth inhibition, bacterial genotoxicity and mutagenicity, and earthworm mortality and growth inhibition. Bioslurry soluble and solid phases were separated by centrifugation in order to identify toxicity and possible toxicants associated with each phase. Microtox toxicity values were initially very high in both bioslurry reactors spiked with TNT, in relation with TNT concentration. Initial toxicity was also detected by algal growth inhibition, earthworm lethality, genotoxicity and mutagenicity tests. An endogenous toxicity was detected in the control bioreactor using the Microtox and the SOS Chromotest. The soluble phase of the control bioslurry was genotoxic, suggest...
Frontiers in Microbiology | 2016
Silvia Sancho Navarro; Ruxandra Cimpoia; Guillaume Bruant; Serge R. Guiot
Syngas generated by thermal gasification of biomass or coal can be steam reformed and purified into methane, which could be used locally for energy needs, or re-injected in the natural gas grid. As an alternative to chemical catalysis, the main components of the syngas (CO, CO2, and H2) can be used as substrates by a wide range of microorganisms, to be converted into gas biofuels, including methane. This study evaluates the carboxydotrophic (CO-consuming) methanogenic potential present in an anaerobic sludge from an upflow anaerobic sludge bed (UASB) reactor treating waste water, and elucidates the CO conversion routes to methane at 35 ± 3°C. Kinetic activity tests under CO at partial pressures (pCO) varying from 0.1 to 1.5 atm (0.09–1.31 mmol/L in the liquid phase) showed a significant carboxydotrophic activity potential for growing conditions on CO alone. A maximum methanogenic activity of 1 mmol CH4 per g of volatile suspended solid and per day was achieved at 0.2 atm of CO (0.17 mmol/L), and then the rate decreased with the amount of CO supplied. The intermediary metabolites such as acetate, H2, and propionate started to accumulate at higher CO concentrations. Inhibition experiments with 2-bromoethanesulfonic acid (BES), fluoroacetate, and vancomycin showed that in a mixed culture CO was converted mainly to acetate by acetogenic bacteria, which was further transformed to methane by acetoclastic methanogens, while direct methanogenic CO conversion was negligible. Methanogenesis was totally blocked at high pCO in the bottles (≥1 atm). However it was possible to achieve higher methanogenic potential under a 100% CO atmosphere after acclimation of the sludge to CO. This adaptation to high CO concentrations led to a shift in the archaeal population, then dominated by hydrogen-utilizing methanogens, which were able to take over acetoclastic methanogens, while syntrophic acetate oxidizing (SAO) bacteria oxidized acetate into CO2 and H2. The disaggregation of the granular sludge showed a negative impact on their methanogenic activity, confirming that the acetoclastic methanogens were the most sensitive to CO, and a contrario, the advantage of using granular sludge for further development toward large-scale methane production from CO-rich syngas.
AMB Express | 2013
Mathieu Haddad; Ruxandra Cimpoia; Ya Zhao; Serge R. Guiot
Carboxydothermus hydrogenoformans is a thermophilic anaerobic strain most widely known for its ability to produce hydrogen (H2) when grown on carbon monoxide (CO). Although relatively well studied, growth characterization on pyruvate has never been assessed. The present work fully characterizes growth of the bacterium on pyruvate as a sole carbon source. C. hydrogenoformans demonstrated a growth rate of 0.03 h-1, with pyruvate consumption ranging between 0.21 and 0.48 mol · g-1 volatile suspended solid · d-1. A lag phase was also observed when switching from pyruvate to CO. When grown simultaneously on pyruvate and CO, pyruvate consumption was initiated upon CO depletion. This was attributed to pyruvate oxidation inhibition by CO, and not to a diauxic phenomenom. The strain also showed homoacetogenic activity.
International Journal of Hydrogen Energy | 2013
Ya Zhao; Mathieu Haddad; Ruxandra Cimpoia; Zhijun Liu; Serge R. Guiot
International Journal of Hydrogen Energy | 2014
Mathieu Haddad; Ruxandra Cimpoia; Serge R. Guiot
International Journal of Hydrogen Energy | 2011
Ya Zhao; Ruxandra Cimpoia; Zhijun Liu; Serge R. Guiot
Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology | 2011
Ya Zhao; Ruxandra Cimpoia; Zhijun Liu; Serge R. Guiot
Water Science and Technology | 2007
Serge R. Guiot; R. Kuhn; M.-J. Lévesque; Ruxandra Cimpoia