Inventor · Bound Brook, NJ, US

Keith McDermott

15Patents
10h-index
40Co-inventors
72Inventor score

Filing activity: Mar 7, 1991 → Jan 17, 2020

Most-cited inventions

PatentTitleAreaCited byStatus
US6042792A Apparatus for preparing a solid phase microparticulate composition Physics 92 Expired
US7235261B2 Controlled release encapsulation Human Necessities 65 Expired
US5506201A Formulation of a fat surfactant vehicle containing a fragrance Chemistry; Metallurgy 47 Expired
US7157411B2 Odor neutralizers Human Necessities 33 Expired
US6235274A Microparticles which controllably release olfactorily active substances, methods of using same and processes for preparing same Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 20 Expired
US6368633B1 Microparticles which controllably release olfactorily active substances, methods of using same and processes for preparing same Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 20 Expired
US5116627A Chewing gum containing compositions for controlled release of flavor bearing substances and process for producing same Human Necessities 18 Expired
US7335631B2 Encapsulated perfume compositions in hair and skin products which release a burst of fragrance after initial topical application Human Necessities 16 Expired
US6156826A Matrix composition comprising surfactant and matrix useful for targeted delivery articles Physics 10 Expired
US7763238B2 Olfactory adaptation and cross-adapting agents to reduce the perception of body odors Human Necessities 10 Expired
US5543439A Extruded fragrance-containing polyvinyl alcohol and use thereof Chemistry; Metallurgy 9 Expired
US11179310B2 Fragrance compositions and products with mood enhancing effects Human Necessities 0 Active
US10828242B2 Artificial sweat composition Physics 0 Active
US9381142B2 Olfactory adaptation and cross-adapting agents to reduce the perception of body odors Human Necessities 0 Active
US12404480B2 Polyurea microcapsules and liquid surfactant systems containing them Chemistry; Metallurgy 0 Active

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