Inventor · Dorsten, DE

Herbert Koch

12Patents
4h-index
12Co-inventors
57Inventor score

Filing activity: Mar 12, 1987 → Jan 24, 2014

Most-cited inventions

PatentTitleAreaCited byStatus
US6537961B1 Amphiphile polymers based on polyester with condensed acetal groups which are liquid at room temperature and are used in detergents and cleaning agents Textiles; Paper 52 Expired
US6121482A Amphiphilic compounds with at least two hydrophilic and at least two hydrophobic groups based on dicarboxamides Chemistry; Metallurgy 9 Expired
US6156721A Use of anionic gemini tensides in formulations for washing, cleaning and body care agents Chemistry; Metallurgy 9 Expired
US6066755A Amphiphilic compounds with a plurality of hydrophilic and hydrophobic groups based on carbonic acid derivatives Chemistry; Metallurgy 8 Expired
US7119056B2 Free-flowing, amphiphilic, non-ionic oligoesters Chemistry; Metallurgy 4 Expired
US5962726A Amphiphilic compounds with several hydrophilic and hydrophobic groups based on alkoxylated amines and/or amides and di-, oligo- or polycarboxylic acids Chemistry; Metallurgy 2 Expired
US5723590A Acid-cleavable surfactants based on alkylglycosides Chemistry; Metallurgy 1 Expired
US7151147B2 Method for producing polymers using conjugated dienes and vinyl aromatic compounds, polymers produced according to said method and use thereof Chemistry; Metallurgy 1 Expired
US6452055B1 Method for the catalytic hydroformylation of olefins in a microemulsion Chemistry; Metallurgy 1 Expired
US9732270B2 Highly concentrated, water-free amine salts of hydrocarbon alkoxysulfates and use and method using aqueous dilutions of the same Chemistry; Metallurgy 0 Active
US9758718B2 Highly concentrated, water-free amine salts of hydrocarbon alkoxysulfates and use and method using aqueous dilutions of the same Chemistry; Metallurgy 0 Active
US4820637A Detection of fungi and/or algae with stilbene having at least 4 sulpho groups Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 0 Expired

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