Inventor · Berlin, DE

Michael Redecker

13Patents
4h-index
11Co-inventors
49Inventor score

Filing activity: May 11, 2001 → Aug 22, 2005

Most-cited inventions

PatentTitleAreaCited byStatus
US7557369B2 Display and method for manufacturing the same Electricity 15 Active
US6872969B2 Non-volatile memory device and matrix display panel using the same Electricity 12 Expired
US7201859B2 Hole transport layer and method for manufacturing the organic EL device by using the same Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 9 Expired
US7015501B2 Substrate and organic electroluminescence device using the substrate Physics 7 Expired
US6667729B2 Method of electrically addressing polymer fluorescent display element and polymer fluorescent display element Physics 2 Expired
US7833612B2 Substrate for inkjet printing and method of manufacturing the same Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 2 Active
US7119765B2 Circuit for driving matrix display panel with photoluminescence quenching devices, and matrix display apparatus incorporating the circuit Physics 1 Expired
US7294964B2 Display using a photoluminescence quenching device, and method for displaying image using the same Electricity 1 Expired
US7285795B2 Vertical field-effect transistor, method of manufacturing the same, and display device having the same Electricity 1 Expired
US7402343B2 Molecular chemical compounds with structures allowing electron displacement and capable of emitting photoluminescent radiation, and photoluminescence quenching device employing the same Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 0 Expired
US7724215B2 Method for displaying image using display having a photoluminescence quenching device Electricity 0 Active
US7492094B2 Photoluminescence quenching device and display using photoluminescence quenching devices Electricity 0 Expired
US7838871B2 Organic field-effect transistor, flat panel display device including the same, and a method of manufacturing the organic field-effect transistor Electricity 0 Expired

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