Inventor · Leonberg, DE

Bernhard Opitz

15Patents
4h-index
44Co-inventors
60Inventor score

Filing activity: Feb 17, 1999 → Oct 16, 2018

Most-cited inventions

PatentTitleAreaCited byStatus
US8504321B2 Method and device for determining one or more rotational speeds of a turbocharging device, in particular for an internal combustion engine Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 6 Active
US7992443B2 Sensor element for capacitive differential-pressure sensing Performing Operations; Transporting 5 Active
US8007169B2 Sensor Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 5 Active
US7966877B2 Heated hot-film air-mass sensor Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 4 Active
US7980126B2 Method for operating hot-film air-mass sensors Physics 4 Active
US7637171B2 Ultrasonic flow sensor with quadrature demodulation Physics 3 Active
US9500465B2 Method and device for determining a recognition threshold Physics 3 Active
US6901355B2 Method for correcting non-linearities of an output signal of an electrical component, particularly a measuring transducer Mechanical Engineering; Lighting; Heating 3 Expired
US6177840A Circuit arrangement for amplifying a differential voltage signal which has a substantially temperature independent characteristic curve Electricity 2 Expired
US8448503B2 Hot-film air-mass meter having a flow separating element Physics 2 Active
US9501446B2 Control unit for the exchange of data with a peripheral unit, peripheral unit, and method for data exchange Electricity 1 Active
US11493364B2 Sensor system for determining at least one rotation characteristic of an element rotating around at least one rotation axis Physics 0 Active
US11398810B2 Device for signal processing Electricity 0 Active
US6486648B1 Electronic circuit including an analog output through which an adjustment means is programmed Physics 0 Expired
US9745946B2 Device for controlling a multiple spark operation of an internal combustion engine, and related method Mechanical Engineering; Lighting; Heating 0 Active

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