Inventor · Somerville, MA, US

Daniel M. Horowitz

15Patents
9h-index
10Co-inventors
65Inventor score

Filing activity: Aug 8, 1995 → Jul 10, 2012

Most-cited inventions

PatentTitleAreaCited byStatus
US6245537A Removing endotoxin with an oxdizing agent from polyhydroxyalkanoates produced by fermentation Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 204 Expired
US6623749B2 Medical device containing polyhydroxyalkanoate treated with oxidizing agent to remove endotoxin Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 86 Expired
US6071998A Polyhydroxyalkanoate molding compositions Chemistry; Metallurgy 70 Expired
US7244442B2 Method for making devices using polyhydroxyalkanoate having pyrogen removed Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 56 Expired
US8231889B2 Method of forming medical devices having pyrogen removed for in vivo application Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 26 Active
US6228934A Methods and apparatus for the production of amorphous polymer suspensions Chemistry; Metallurgy 21 Expired
US6340580B1 Methods for purifying polyhydroxy alkanoates Chemistry; Metallurgy 15 Expired
US8771720B2 Medical device comprising polyhydroxyalkanoate having pyrogen removed using oxidizing agent Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 9 Active
US5599891A Polymer composition Chemistry; Metallurgy 9 Expired
US6368836B2 Method of decolorizing or deodorizing polyhydroxyalkanoates from biomass with ozone Chemistry; Metallurgy 6 Expired
US7906135B2 Medical device comprising polyhydroxyalkanoate having pyrogen removed Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 5 Active
US6323276A Methods and apparatus for the production of amorphous polymer suspensions Chemistry; Metallurgy 4 Expired
US6214920A Polyhydroxyalkanoate molding compositions Chemistry; Metallurgy 2 Expired
US6605262B2 Methods and apparatus for the production of amorphous polymer suspensions Chemistry; Metallurgy 1 Expired
US6429285B2 Polymer compositions providing low residue levels and methods of use thereof Chemistry; Metallurgy 0 Expired

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