19 U.S. patents recently issued to Purdue University innovations
Congratulations to Purdue University researchers across all campuses and academic disciplines. They have recently received 19 patents on their intellectual property from the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office.
The majority of these are available to license. Visit the Purdue Research Foundation Office of Technology Commercialization’s web site to learn more about these and other available technologies.
Here are the primary investigators whose work was recently patented. Also included are their college and the issued patent number.
Find patent information online by searching for the patent number preceded by “US” — like US11,200,822 or US11,203,675 — on https://patents.google.com/.
Rakesh Agrawal, College of Engineering
· “A process to produce alkenes from shale gas,” #11,434,184
Saurabh Bagchi, College of Engineering
· “Clustered database reconfiguration system for time-varying workloads,” #11,436,207
Charles Bouman Jr., College of Engineering
· “System and method for latency reduction in an optical imaging system,” #11,423,309
Supriyo Datta, College of Engineering
· “Apparatus for spin injection enhancement and method of making the same,” #11,417,834
Ibrahim Gunduz, College of Engineering
· “Methods and apparatus for 3D printing of highly viscuous materials,” #11,420,387
John E. Haddock, College of Engineering
· “Quantifying emulsified asphalt-based chip seal curing times using electrical properties,” #11,435,306
Ryan Hilger, College of Science
· “Devices for heating small-diameter tubing and methods of making and using,” #11,438,970
Y. Charlie Hu, College of Engineering
· “System and method for energy usage accounting in software applications,” #11,429,764
Nicole Key, College of Engineering
· “Compressor stall warning using nonlinear feature extraction algorithms,” #11,415,139
Tong Kim, College of Liberal Arts
· “Furniture and methods of storage,” #11,412,855
Philip Low, College of Science
· “Fibroblast activation protein (FAP) targeted imaging and therapy in fibrosis,” #11,426,472
Jeffrey T. Miller, College of Engineering
· “Phosphate-promoted nickel catalyst for high temperature oligomerization,” #11,406,907
Dimitrios Peroulis, College of Engineering
· “Wireless power transmission based on pre-matched filtering,” #11,437,859
Davin Piercey, College of Engineering
· “Novel synthesis of 5-nitrotetrazole,” #11,434,211
Kenneth H. Sandhage, College of Engineering
· “Methods of fabricating oxide/metal composites and components produced thereby,” #11,434,173
Jeffrey M. Siskind, College of Engineering
· “System and method for divide-and-conquer checkpointing,” #11,409,526
Sydney Smith, no longer at Purdue
· “Food allergen detector,” D962803
David H. Thompson, College of Science
· “Polyrotazanes bearing mixed cydlodestrin species and uses thereof,” #11,434,330
Vikas Tomar, College of Engineering
· “Arrangement for lithium-ion battery thermal events prediction, prevention, and control cross-reference,” #11,431,040
During the 2020 calendar year, Purdue Research Foundation ranked #6 internationally for patents received from the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office. That was an increase from the #13 international ranking from the year before. The information was listed in a report from the Intellectual Property Owners Association and the National Academy of Inventors.
Are you a researcher at a Purdue University campus who has made an innovation discovery? Disclose your innovation to the Office of Technology Commercialization online.
Purdue inventors are hard at work as they persistently pursue new discoveries and world-changing solutions. The list of new patents continues to grow and grow. Subscribe to The Line for new updates and take a look back on recent announcements and new innovations in our Inventors Tab.