Jorg Binz
13Patents
6h-index
12Co-inventors
59Inventor score
Filing activity: Nov 14, 1980 → Sep 23, 1997
Most-cited inventions
| Patent | Title | Area | Cited by | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| US4964871A | Process for preventing yellowing of polyamide fibre materials treated with stain-blocking agents by treatment with water-soluble light stabilizer having fibre affinity | Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies | 53 | Expired |
| US5571444A | Textile treatment | Textiles; Paper | 21 | Expired |
| US4408995A | Process for dyeing or finishing textile fibre materials with foamed aqueous liquor containing ethylene oxide-propylene oxide block co-polymer | Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies | 14 | Expired |
| US4413998A | Process for the treatment of textile fibre materials | Textiles; Paper | 14 | Expired |
| US4365967A | Method of treating, especially dyeing, whitening or finishing, textile fabrics | Textiles; Paper | 13 | Expired |
| US4906413A | Diquaternary ammonium salts and the use thereof as textile finishing agents | Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies | 7 | Expired |
| US4721512A | Process for aftertreating dyed cellulosic material | Textiles; Paper | 5 | Expired |
| US4345909A | Process for dyeing or treating textile fibre materials | Textiles; Paper | 5 | Expired |
| US5133779A | Cationic reaction products of basic carbamides and epihalohydrins: quaternary ammonium salts as dyeing aids for cellulose | Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies | 4 | Expired |
| US5914445A | Dyeing assistant preparations and their use for dyeing wool | Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies | 2 | Expired |
| US5081294A | Cationic reaction products of basic carbamides and epithalohydrins | Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies | 2 | Expired |
| US5540739A | Process for dyeing naturally occurring or synthetic polyamide fibres | Textiles; Paper | 2 | Expired |
| US4822374A | Process for the aftertreatment of dyed cellulose fibers | Textiles; Paper | 1 | Expired |
Source: USPTO / EPO open patent data. Inventor disambiguation is heuristic; counts are objective bibliographic measures.