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Colin Bennett

Four Key Trends Driving the Future of Patents - 0 views

  • Clearly their efforts have been paying off as total patent filings in China have mushroomed from 51,906 in 2000 to 391,177 in 2010. During that same time, U.S. patent filings have grown from 295,895 in 2000 to 490,226 in 2010.
Colin Bennett

Graphene patent for multiple material printer filament - 0 views

  • This patent application is the result of a diligent effort on behalf of our team. It opens up a clear path toward the commercialization of graphene
Colin Bennett

Bayer sells patents for carbon nanotubes and graphenes - 1 views

  • All of our materials are manufactured on an industrial scale.
  •  
    "All of our materials are manufactured on an industrial scale."
Colin Bennett

Innovations in Water Production and Its Impact on Key Sectors - 1 views

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    "Water is necessary for many applications apart from sustaining life. Because it may not be available in sufficient quantity or at the quality required, some form of treatment may be necessary to meet the needs of an application. More stringent water quality specifications normally require more elaborate treatment methods. Challenges of availing clean water suitable for specific applications have led to innovations in water production to meet the needs of each sector. This research service reports on innovations in water production that specifically impact each key sector. It gives the industry snapshot of each key sector, its current water scenario, innovation landscape, global trends and technology roadmap till 2025. Several examples of innovative non-technological ways to produce or provide water are presented at the end of the report. Some key patents and contact details of key industry players are also given."
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Optomec and Applied Nanotech Announce Strategic Cooperation on Printable Electronics | EMAsiaMag.com - 0 views

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    Applied Nanotech Holdings Inc announced that its subsidiary, Applied Nanotech Inc (ANI), established a strategic development program with Optomec, Inc, a provider of printed electronics for solar, display, electronic packaging and flexible electronics applications. As a part of the commitment, ANI will install a dedicated Optomec M3D aerosol jet printer at its facilities in order to adapt its copper ink to Optomec's patented ultra high resolution printing technology. By utilizing ANI's copper ink, the Optomec printer will offer the solar, display, flexible circuit and PCB manufacturers contact-free deposition of high quality, low cost metal lines, the companies said. According to the companies, the Optomec printing solution is able to produce much finer lines than is currently possible with traditional screen printing and inkjet printing equipment. The combined ANI/Optomec copper ink printing solution will provide an alternative to silver inks facilitating lower cost, coupled with the promise of higher reliability. Furthermore, ANI's copper inks do not require expensive vacuum installation or inert gas environment lowering the cost of the capital for manufacturing equipment.
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HelioVolt hopes for a fast scale-up with high-efficiency CIGS process » VentureBeat - 0 views

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    These are heady times for the thin-film solar industry. The sector's dominant player, First Solar, has been on a tear of late, recently announcing it would build a second 10 megawatt power plant in Nevada, while Miasole, once thought to be ailing, has staged an impressive comeback, raking in an eye-popping $220 million. Nanosolar has developed a new ultra-fast solar cell printer, and even giants like IBM and Applied Materials have gotten in on the game. In the face of such intense competition, how will HelioVolt, a well-funded outpost of CIGS manufacturing in Texas, fare? The company hopes a new hybrid, super fast CIGS process it has developed in collaboration with the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL), which combines its patented FASST process and NREL's non-vacuum deposition technique, will help even the odds. The Austin, Texas-based company licensed NREL's non-vacuum deposition process, which allows for the quick application of liquid precursors onto a printing plate and substrate, to manufacture its solar cells with a 12.2 percent conversion efficiency at a fraction of the regular cost and in record time - under 6 minutes. Another advantage is that the substrate can be made from a variety of building materials, including glass, metals, plastics and roofing materials.
Colin Bennett

The Wireless Power Consortium - 0 views

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    Members will not charge royalties for patents that are essential for implementing low power receivers. A wireless power receiver is a 'low power receiver' when it is a consumer product, such as a mobile phone or battery, capable of receiving no more than 5 Watt from a wireless power transmitter. These royalty-free licenses are available until 2014.
Colin Bennett

Innovation trends in nuclear power generation - 0 views

  • From the first commercial nuclear power plant in the UK in 1956 to the accident of Chernobyl in 1986, nuclear power generation has been booming. Hundreds of nuclear power plants have been built in a dozen of countries. Innovation was also strong: the number of patents has been growing steadily by almost 8% per year from 1978 to 1982 to reach a maximum in 1985. The year of Chernobyl, the number of patents dropped, for the first time.
Colin Bennett

Nexans' Colored Conductors for Overhead Power Lines Blend into Norway's Pine Forest Scenery - 0 views

  • The patented treatment process enables any design of conductor – such as round or Aero-Z™ wires - to be produced in virtually any color.
Colin Bennett

President Obama Taps Alcoa's Kleinfeld to Help Advance US Manufacturing - 0 views

  • Most of Alcoa’s innovations start at the Alcoa Technical Center, the world’s largest light metals R&D center, located outside Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Its experts collaborate closely with Alcoa’s customers, businesses and the company’s other R&D centers in Michigan, California and Australia. Together, these centers have filed more than 2,000 active global patents.
Colin Bennett

Recently Discovered Nanocoating Makes Heat Transfer Happen Much Easier - 0 views

  • The action of cooling things down plays a critical part of any mechanical or electric system, because the inevitable heat, produced by friction, is the number one cause of almost instant failure. So far, different methods that cool systems have been discovered, but not to the extent of performance that engineers dream of building their computers or mechanical devices (cars, for example). Oregon State University researchers, led by Terry Hendricks, have discovered a method of applying a nanostructured coating that could make the heat transfer more easily. Their findings have been published in the International Journel of Heat and Mass Transfer, and they also filed a patent for them.
Sergio Ferreira

Saving Gas: Pneumatic Hybrid Engine Is Much Cheaper Than Electric Hybrids And Almost As Economical - 0 views

  • Although the fuel saving achieved by the pneumatic hybrid is not as large as that of an electric hybrid, it still amounts to 80 percent of the latter. In return, the price-performance ratio is distinctly better.
  • The new engine concept has aroused the interest of several major motor companies and automitive suppliers, who have obtained information on-site. Some of the ideas of the new concept have already been patented
Colin Bennett

MIT Liquid Battery Inventor Returns With Big Plans for Ultra-High Current Industry - 0 views

  • Back in March, there was everything about a battery that contained antimony, sodium sulfide and magnesium. Because of patenting secrecy, any further public details have not been given, so what we know now of the battery’s components, like then, is that there are two metals and a salt involved. Update: if you watch the blackboard behind him, you’ll see that the “secret” is about Nickel and Copper.
Colin Bennett

New lighting controller technology - 0 views

  • “We have designed a patented lighting controller that does power shaping on electricity that goes into ballasts,” said David Berg, Cavet’s founder, executive vice president, product management and engineering. “It’s a little smaller than a shoe box, depending on how big your feet are.”
Colin Bennett

Substitution of aluminum alloy for copper might open a new era for cable - 2 views

  • The rare earths high iron aluminum alloy material, developed by the company, mixes aluminum and some special materials, for example, rare earths to change the physical properties, which results a non-ferrous materials “revolution". The alloy cable enjoys three advantages, such as performance, it shows 35% more of percentage elongation,50% more of resisting fatigue strength, 40% less of inverse elasticity, 10 more years of service life and stronger antioxidant and corrosion resistance than those of copper wire, because of rare earths element added in conductor and better insulating material; safety, it is contributed to adding the patent fire retardants so that the alloy cable can still function for light even on fire; and cost, 40% less than that of copper wire.
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