Inventor · Bethlehem, PA, US

Arup K. SenGupta

13Patents
5h-index
18Co-inventors
63Inventor score

Filing activity: Jun 24, 1992 → Mar 23, 2018

Most-cited inventions

PatentTitleAreaCited byStatus
US6136199A Selective removal of phosphates and chromates from contaminated water by ion exchange Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 18 Expired
US7291578B2 Hybrid anion exchanger for selective removal of contaminating ligands from fluids and method of manufacture thereof Chemistry; Metallurgy 17 Expired
US7901577B2 Brackish and sea water desalination using a hybrid ion exchange-nanofiltration process Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 12 Active
US5304309A Cyclic process for selective coagulant recovery from clarifier sludge Performing Operations; Transporting 9 Expired
US7540965B2 Process for treating concentrated salt solutions containing DOC Chemistry; Metallurgy 9 Expired
US6495047B1 Process for selective coagulant recovery from water treatment plant sludge Chemistry; Metallurgy 5 Expired
US9120093B2 Hybrid anion exchanger impregnated with hydrated zirconium oxide for selective removal of contaminating ligand and methods of manufacture and use thereof Performing Operations; Transporting 3 Active
US8187890B2 Rapid sensing of toxic metals with hybrid inorganic materials Physics 1 Active
US9731983B2 Ion exchange methods for treating water hardness Chemistry; Metallurgy 0 Active
US9580337B2 Pressurized forward osmosis process and system Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 0 Active
US10125033B2 Self-regenerating anion exchange process for treating shale gas flowback waste water Chemistry; Metallurgy 0 Active
US10472261B2 Contaminants removal with simultaneous desalination using carbon dioxide regenerated hybrid ion exchanger nanomaterials Chemistry; Metallurgy 0 Active
US10399877B2 In-situ, self-adjusting stability control of methane-producing anaerobic biological reactors through novel use of ion exchange fibers Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 0 Active

Source: USPTO / EPO open patent data. Inventor disambiguation is heuristic; counts are objective bibliographic measures.