Inventor · Idaho Falls, ID, US

Paul A. Lessing

14Patents
9h-index
10Co-inventors
69Inventor score

Filing activity: Jul 29, 1993 → Jun 22, 2015

Most-cited inventions

PatentTitleAreaCited byStatus
US5641585A Miniature ceramic fuel cell Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 151 Expired
US5496655A Catalytic bipolar interconnection plate for use in a fuel cell Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 52 Expired
US5786611A Radiation shielding composition Physics 39 Expired
US5427747A Method and apparatus for producing oxygenates from hydrocarbons Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 38 Expired
US6166390A Radiation shielding composition Physics 29 Expired
US6120706A Process for producing an aggregate suitable for inclusion into a radiation shielding product Physics 21 Expired
US6787007B2 Polymeric hydrogen diffusion barrier, high-pressure storage tank so equipped, method of fabricating a storage tank and method of preventing hydrogen diffusion Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 13 Expired
US5464583A Method for manufacturing whisker preforms and composites Chemistry; Metallurgy 11 Expired
US7951283B2 High temperature electrolysis for syngas production Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 11 Active
US7008970B2 Method for direct conversion of gaseous hydrocarbons to liquids Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 8 Expired
US5459767A Method for testing the strength and structural integrity of nuclear fuel particles Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 7 Expired
US7033551B2 Apparatus and methods for direct conversion of gaseous hydrocarbons to liquids Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 5 Expired
US7402234B2 Polymeric hydrogen diffusion barrier, high-pressure storage tank so equipped, method of fabricating a storage tank and method of preventing hydrogen diffusion Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 1 Active
US10109381B2 Methods of forming triuranium disilicide structures, and related fuel rods for light water reactors Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 0 Active

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