Inventor · Hackettstown, NJ, US

Donald W. Murphy

17Patents
10h-index
26Co-inventors
72Inventor score

Filing activity: May 4, 1976 → Feb 11, 2004

Most-cited inventions

PatentTitleAreaCited byStatus
US4194062A Rechargeable dichalcogenide cell Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 69 Expired
US6329226A Method for fabricating a thin-film transistor Electricity 56 Expired
US5962883A Article comprising an oxide layer on a GaAs-based semiconductor body Electricity 27 Expired
US4542083A Nonaqueous cell using mixed metal oxide positive electrode Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 20 Expired
US4198476A Nonaqueous secondary cell using metal oxide electrodes Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 20 Expired
US6603241B1 Acoustic mirror materials for acoustic devices Electricity 17 Expired
US4228226A Nonaqueous secondary cell using vanadium oxide positive electrode Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 17 Expired
US6927125B2 Interdigitated capacitor and method of manufacturing thereof Electricity 17 Expired
US6740922B2 Interdigitated capacitor and method of manufacturing thereof Electricity 15 Expired
US4125687A Rechargeable nonaqueous cell with chalcogenide electrode Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 12 Expired
US5698497A Superconductivity in carbonaceous compounds and devices using such compounds Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 10 Expired
US5391323A Conductivity in carbonaceous compounds and devices using such compounds Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 8 Expired
US6271069A Method of making an article comprising an oxide layer on a GaAs-based semiconductor body Electricity 8 Expired
US5560752A Process for activation of metal hydrides Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 7 Expired
US5298037A Metal hydrides Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 7 Expired
US4159962A Method of preparing layered chalcogenides Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 6 Expired
US4035555A Rechargeable nonaqueous batteries Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 3 Expired

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