Peter J. Melling
14Patents
7h-index
23Co-inventors
66Inventor score
Filing activity: Nov 6, 1985 → Aug 12, 2011
Most-cited inventions
| Patent | Title | Area | Cited by | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| US5198269A | Process for making sol-gel deposited ferroelectric thin films insensitive to their substrates | Chemistry; Metallurgy | 122 | Expired |
| US5841330A | Series coupled filters where the first filter is a dielectric resonator filter with cross-coupling | Electricity | 76 | Expired |
| US5170056A | Optical fiber coupled devices for remote spectroscopy in the infrared | Physics | 50 | Expired |
| US4704299A | Process for low temperature curing of sol-gel thin films | Chemistry; Metallurgy | 36 | Expired |
| US5754722A | Fiber-optic spectroscopic probe with interchangeable sampling heads | Physics | 17 | Expired |
| US6310348A | Spectroscopic accessory for examining films and coatings on solid surfaces | Physics | 7 | Expired |
| US5754715A | Mid-infrared fiber-optic spectroscopic probe | Physics | 7 | Expired |
| US5923808A | Mid-infrared fiber-optic spectroscopic probe for use at elevated temperatures | Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies | 5 | Expired |
| US7622093B2 | Method for zonal injection of chemicals into a furnace convective pass to reduce pollutants from flue gases | Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies | 4 | Active |
| US4806330A | Process for preparing high purity aluminum nitride | Chemistry; Metallurgy | 4 | Expired |
| US8735822B2 | Method for detecting and measuring low concentrations of contaminants using attenuated total reflectance spectroscopy in the mid-IR range | Physics | 3 | Active |
| US5567219A | Polyimide coated heavy metal fluoride glass fiber and method of manufacture | Physics | 3 | Expired |
| US5688553A | Polyimide coated heavy metal fluoride glass fiber and method of manufacture | Physics | 0 | Expired |
| US5093095A | Crystallization in a force field | Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies | 0 | Expired |
Source: USPTO / EPO open patent data. Inventor disambiguation is heuristic; counts are objective bibliographic measures.