Inventor · Princeton, NJ, US

Eric Scott

18Patents
9h-index
21Co-inventors
72Inventor score

Filing activity: Aug 8, 1974 → Oct 4, 2021

Most-cited inventions

PatentTitleAreaCited byStatus
US5494024A Paint ball gun and assemblies therefor Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 65 Expired
US5669369A Paint ball gun and assemblies therefor Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 62 Expired
US6233928A Paint ball gun and assemblies therefor Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 37 Expired
US4411770A Hydrovisbreaking process Chemistry; Metallurgy 36 Expired
US4548709A Hydrotreating petroleum heavy ends in aromatic solvents with dual pore size distribution alumina catalyst Chemistry; Metallurgy 16 Expired
US4585546A Hydrotreating petroleum heavy ends in aromatic solvents with large pore size alumina Performing Operations; Transporting 16 Expired
US4171260A Process for reducing thiophenic sulfur in heavy oil Chemistry; Metallurgy 16 Expired
US4439310A Petroleum processing with low acidity catalyst Performing Operations; Transporting 13 Expired
US4486298A Adsorptive demetalation of heavy petroleum residua Chemistry; Metallurgy 10 Expired
US9199278B2 Apparatus and method for separating solids from a solids laden drilling fluid Performing Operations; Transporting 6 Active
US5520773A Label applicator Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 5 Expired
US6948698B1 Valve for pressurized canister Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 4 Expired
US4021334A Process for manufacture of stabilized lubricating oil with elemental sulfur Chemistry; Metallurgy 4 Expired
US3972853A Process for stabilizing lubricating oil with elemental sulfur Chemistry; Metallurgy 4 Expired
USD329889S Golf putter General 3 Expired
US11901164B2 Micro-surface morphological matching for reactor components Electricity 0 Active
US11139151B1 Micro-surface morphological matching for reactor components Electricity 0 Active
US10160526B2 Inflatable personal floatation systems Performing Operations; Transporting 0 Active

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