Inventor · Laguna Hills, CA, US

David Kelly Moyeda

14Patents
5h-index
24Co-inventors
66Inventor score

Filing activity: Jun 7, 1995 → Dec 22, 2015

Most-cited inventions

PatentTitleAreaCited byStatus
US5759022A Method and system for reducing NO.sub.x and fuel emissions in a furnace Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 148 Expired
US9310347B2 Methods and systems for analyzing combustion system operation Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 11 Active
US8501131B2 Method and apparatus to inject reagent in SNCR/SCR emission system for boiler Mechanical Engineering; Lighting; Heating 7 Active
US5795364A Reburning glass furnace for insuring adequate mixing of gases to reduce NO.sub.x emissions Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 6 Expired
US7374735B2 Method for nitrogen oxide reduction in flue gas Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 6 Expired
US8430665B2 Combustion systems and processes for burning fossil fuel with reduced nitrogen oxide emissions Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 3 Active
US6481998B2 High velocity reburn fuel injector Mechanical Engineering; Lighting; Heating 3 Expired
US7736608B2 Methods and systems for reducing the emissions from combustion gases Mechanical Engineering; Lighting; Heating 3 Active
US8309045B2 System and method for controlling emissions in a combustion system Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 2 Active
US8728412B2 Apparatus for a nitrogen purge system Mechanical Engineering; Lighting; Heating 1 Active
US8052950B2 Multi-compartment overfire air and N-agent injection method for nitrogen oxide reduction in flue gas Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 1 Active
US11125433B2 System and method for combustion tuning Mechanical Engineering; Lighting; Heating 0 Active
US7892499B2 Multi-compartment overfire air and N-agent injection method and system for nitrogen oxide reduction in flue gas Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 0 Active
US10823671B2 Gas detector and method of detection Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 0 Active

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