Inventor · Houston, TX, US

Jay Chen

18Patents
7h-index
29Co-inventors
66Inventor score

Filing activity: Nov 14, 1996 → Dec 30, 2021

Most-cited inventions

PatentTitleAreaCited byStatus
US7096494B1 Cryptographic system and method for electronic transactions Electricity 156 Expired
US5755061A Rain gutter cover Fixed Constructions 22 Expired
US9020011B1 Enabling RX signal path synchronization and alignment signals in a highly integrated TX RFIC Electricity 16 Active
US8217418B1 Semi-polar semiconductor light emission devices Electricity 16 Active
US7383248B2 Hyperlink park and search Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 9 Expired
US8624292B2 Non-polar semiconductor light emission devices Electricity 9 Active
US8722441B2 Manufacturing process for solid state lighting device on a conductive substrate Electricity 7 Active
US8283676B2 Manufacturing process for solid state lighting device on a conductive substrate Electricity 6 Active
US5916092A Rain gutter cover Fixed Constructions 6 Expired
US9298868B2 Hierarchical pushdown of cells and nets to any logical depth Physics 1 Active
US9647829B1 Enabling RX signal path synchronization and alignment signals in a highly integrated TX RFIC Electricity 1 Active
US10270583B2 Enabling RX signal path synchronization and alignment signals in a highly integrated TX RFIC Electricity 1 Active
US10900094B2 Methods of identifying and modulating pathogen resistance in plants Chemistry; Metallurgy 0 Active
US9994998B2 Key gene regulating plant cell wall recalcitrance Textiles; Paper 0 Active
US9979534B2 Enabling RX signal path synchronization and alignment signals in a highly integrated TX RFIC Electricity 0 Active
US11995065B2 Database anomaly detection Electricity 0 Active
US9206436B2 Key gene regulating cell wall biosynthesis and recalcitrance in Populus, gene Y Chemistry; Metallurgy 0 Active
US10106807B2 Transcription factor which regulates flavonoid, phenylpropanoid, tyrosine, and tryptophan pathways Chemistry; Metallurgy 0 Active

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