Inventor · Waterloo, BE

Rene Detroz

12Patents
6h-index
10Co-inventors
63Inventor score

Filing activity: May 1, 1984 → Aug 20, 2007

Most-cited inventions

PatentTitleAreaCited byStatus
US6426211B1 Xylanase derived from a Bacillus species, expression vectors for such xylanase and other proteins, host organisms therefor and use thereof Chemistry; Metallurgy 50 Expired
US5044116A Coated seeds and a process for their obtainment Human Necessities 42 Expired
US4879839A Coated seeds and process for preparing them Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 31 Expired
US4735017A Coated seeds and process for preparing them Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 23 Expired
US5645686A Process for bleaching a pulp in a sequence including an enzyme stage Textiles; Paper 17 Expired
US6346407B1 Xylanase, microorganisms producing it, DNA molecules, methods for preparing this xylanase and uses of the latter Textiles; Paper 14 Expired
US6423523B1 Xylanase derived from a bacillus species, expression vectors for such xylanase and other proteins, host organisms therefor and use thereof Chemistry; Metallurgy 3 Expired
US4661351A Compositions containing biosynthetic pesticidal products and at least one phosphate, processes for their preparation and their use Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 3 Expired
US6180382A Xylanase derived from a bacillus species, expression vectors for such xylanase and other proteins, host organisms therefor and use thereof Chemistry; Metallurgy 2 Expired
US7022827B2 Xylanase, microorganisms producing it, DNA molecules, methods for preparing this xylanase and uses of the latter Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 0 Expired
US8148104B2 Xylanase, microorganisms producing it, DNA molecules, methods for preparing this xylanase and uses of the latter Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 0 Active
US7638613B2 Xylanase, microorganisms producing it, DNA molecules, methods for preparing this xylanase and uses of the latter Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 0 Expired

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