Inventor · Issaquah, WA, US

Jay Eunjae Kim

16Patents
3h-index
4Co-inventors
45Inventor score

Filing activity: Feb 17, 2012 → Nov 3, 2016

Most-cited inventions

PatentTitleAreaCited byStatus
US9167723B1 Silicon-based heat-dissipation device for heat-generating devices Electricity 5 Active
US9159642B2 Silicon-based heat dissipation device for heat-generating devices Electricity 4 Active
US9743555B2 Silicon-based heat dissipation device for heat-generating devices Electricity 4 Active
US10055631B1 Semiconductor package for sensor applications Electricity 3 Active
US9288930B2 Thermal energy storage with a phase-change material in a non-metal container Electricity 3 Active
US9980363B2 Composite heat sink device for cooling of multiple heat sources in close proximity Electricity 1 Active
US8916765B2 3-D sola cell device for a concentrated photovoltaic system Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 1 Active
US9042424B2 Silicon-based lens support structure and cooling package with passive alignment for compact heat-generating devices Electricity 1 Active
US9579837B2 Method and apparatus for treating waste materials Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 0 Active
US9924588B2 Thermal energy storage with a phase-change material in a non-metal container Electricity 0 Active
US9258878B2 Isolation of thermal ground for multiple heat-generating devices on a substrate Electricity 0 Active
US9089075B2 Silicon-based cooling package for cooling and thermally decoupling devices in close proximity Electricity 0 Active
US9420722B2 Composite heat sink device for cooling of multiple heat sources in close proximity Electricity 0 Active
US9769956B2 Silicon-based cooling package for cooling and thermally decoupling devices in close proximity Electricity 0 Active
US9570666B2 Silicon-based cooling package for light-emitting devices Electricity 0 Active
US9008147B2 Silicon-based lens support structure and cooling package with passive alignment for compact heat-generating devices Electricity 0 Active

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