Inventor · San Francisco, CA, US

Brian E. Lassiter

13Patents
3h-index
18Co-inventors
49Inventor score

Filing activity: Oct 14, 2011 → Jul 1, 2020

Most-cited inventions

PatentTitleAreaCited byStatus
US9385348B2 Organic electronic devices with multiple solution-processed layers Electricity 11 Active
US10069095B2 Organic photosensitive devices with exciton-blocking charge carrier filters Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 6 Active
US9431621B2 Metal oxide charge transport material doped with organic molecules Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 5 Active
US10297775B2 Organic optoelectronics with electrode buffer layers Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 3 Active
US10276817B2 Stable organic photosensitive devices with exciton-blocking charge carrier filters utilizing high glass transition temperature materials Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 2 Active
US11744089B2 Multijunction organic photovoltaics incorporating solution and vacuum deposited active layers Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 0 Active
US11744138B2 Organic photosensitive devices made using semi-orthogonal solvents and methods of making the same Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 0 Active
US9847487B2 Use of inverse quasi-epitaxy to modify order during post-deposition processing of organic photovoltaics Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 0 Active
US9099652B2 Organic electronic devices with multiple solution-processed layers Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 0 Active
US8816332B2 Organic photovoltaic cell incorporating electron conducting exciton blocking layers Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 0 Active
US10533104B2 Two-step process for forming cured polymeric films for electronic device encapsulation Electricity 0 Active
US11211559B2 Materials for controlling the epitaxial growth of photoactive layers in photovoltaic devices Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 0 Active
US10141531B2 Hybrid planar-graded heterojunction for organic photovoltaics Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 0 Active

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