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S. S. Belyaev

Researcher at Russian Academy of Sciences

Publications -  53
Citations -  1013

S. S. Belyaev is an academic researcher from Russian Academy of Sciences. The author has contributed to research in topics: Methanogenesis & Bacteria. The author has an hindex of 19, co-authored 53 publications receiving 954 citations.

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Isolation and characterization of Thermococcus sibiricus sp. nov. from a Western Siberia high-temperature oil reservoir

TL;DR: The isolation of a hyperthermophilic archaeum from a deep subsurface environment, significantly remote from shallow or abyssal marine hot vents, indicates the existence of a subterranean biosphere inhabited by indigenous hypertherMophilic biota.
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Use of microorganisms in the biotechnology for the enhancement of oil recovery

TL;DR: Three substantial prerequisites exist that allow us to believe in the prospects for the development of new efficient biotechnologies for enhancing oil recovery based on the geochemical activity of microorganisms.
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Occurrence and geochemical activity of microorganisms in high‐temperature, water‐flooded oil fields of Kazakhstan and Western Siberia

TL;DR: In this paper, the distribution of methanogenic and sulfate-reducing bacteria and their activity in formation waters of Uzen, Mykhpay, and Talinskoe oil fields, characterized by temperatures of the strata of 50-70°C and higher, were investigated.
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[The properties of hydrocarbon-oxidizing bacteria isolated from the oilfields of Tatarstan, Western Siberia, and Vietnam].

TL;DR: At certain cultivation temperatures, the addition of volatile fatty acid salts increased the content of certain n-alkanes in oxidized oil as compared to crude oil and led mainly to decreased oxidation of petroleum paraffins.
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Production of oil-releasing compounds by microorganisms from the Daqing Oil Field, China

TL;DR: The Daqing oil field is inhabited by aerobic bacteria capable of producing effective oil-releasing agents, and bacteria of the genera Rhodococcus, Dietzia, Kocuria, and Gordonia produced exopolysaccharides in media with hydrocarbons.