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A. Vande Wouwer

Researcher at University of Mons

Publications -  176
Citations -  1965

A. Vande Wouwer is an academic researcher from University of Mons. The author has contributed to research in topics: Computer science & Nonlinear system. The author has an hindex of 22, co-authored 148 publications receiving 1756 citations. Previous affiliations of A. Vande Wouwer include Faculté polytechnique de Mons & Supélec.

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Adaptive Method of Lines

TL;DR: This paper presents a two-Dimensional model of a Reaction Bonded Aluminum Oxide Cylinder Method of Lines within the Simulation Environment DIVA for Chemical Processes, and describes the development of a 1-D Error-Minimizing Moving Adaptive Grid Method.
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Improving continuous–discrete interval observers with application to microalgae-based bioprocesses

TL;DR: In this paper, interval state estimation methods are proposed in the situation, quite common in biological systems, where measurements are only available at discrete, and possibly rare, times, and the attention is focused on defining predictors preserving the boundedness of the state variables between two measurement times assuming bounded uncertainties.
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Software sensors for bioprocesses

TL;DR: A number of software sensor design methods, including extended Kalman filters, receding-horizon observers, asymptotic observers, and hybrid observers, which can be efficiently applied to bioprocesses are reviewed.
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Nonlinear model predictive control of fed-batch cultures of micro-organisms exhibiting overflow metabolism: Assessment and robustness

TL;DR: This work addresses the control of a lab-scale fed-batch culture of E. coli with a nonlinear model predictive controller (NMPC) to determine the optimal feed flow rate of substrate to maximize glucose oxidation, while minimizing glucose fermentation.
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Dynamic metabolic models of CHO cell cultures through minimal sets of elementary flux modes.

TL;DR: A methodology proposed in Jungers et al. (2011) is used to compute a decomposition of admissible flux vectors in a minimal number of elementary flux modes without explicitly enumerating all of them, and a set of macroscopic bioreactions linking the extracellular measured species is obtained at a very low computational expense.