Jean Balland
14Patents
5h-index
3Co-inventors
59Inventor score
Filing activity: Mar 17, 1975 → Oct 7, 2004
Most-cited inventions
| Patent | Title | Area | Cited by | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| US6464947B2 | Catalytic converter for vehicle exhaust | Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies | 32 | Expired |
| US6803236B2 | Diagnostic system for monitoring catalyst performance | Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies | 21 | Expired |
| US6933151B2 | Diagnostic system for monitoring catalyst performance | Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies | 13 | Expired |
| US4118538A | Fabric-printing or dyeing process using thermosensitizer for latex binder | Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies | 5 | Expired |
| US4231749A | Dyeing process using a sequestrating agent | Textiles; Paper | 5 | Expired |
| US4072464A | Epoxypropyl ammonium salt and boric acid assisted dyeing process | Textiles; Paper | 5 | Expired |
| US3988111A | Process for the dyeing of textile fibers in an organic-system medium | Textiles; Paper | 3 | Expired |
| US4371373A | Chloride oxidation of dyes in vat and sulfur dyed textiles | Textiles; Paper | 3 | Expired |
| US4141685A | Method of bleaching textile fibers and activated bath for the cold bleaching of such fibers | Textiles; Paper | 2 | Expired |
| US5378245A | Process of dyeing using reactive dyes with preliminary bleaching | Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies | 2 | Expired |
| US4149847A | Process for treating textile fibers with a dye containing an antimigration agent | Textiles; Paper | 2 | Expired |
| US4547196A | Process for fixing direct and reactive dyestuffs on cellulosic fibers with addition of magnesium salt and zirconium salt to fixing agent | Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies | 1 | Expired |
| US4199320A | Whitening of cellulosic textiles | Textiles; Paper | 1 | Expired |
| US4456453A | Method of oxidizing and simultaneously fixing sulfur dyestuffs on cellulosic fibers | Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies | 0 | Expired |
Source: USPTO / EPO open patent data. Inventor disambiguation is heuristic; counts are objective bibliographic measures.