Inventor · Grosse Pointe Park, MI, US

Robert D. Bach

17Patents
13h-index
9Co-inventors
71Inventor score

Filing activity: Nov 8, 1984 → Feb 9, 2024

Most-cited inventions

PatentTitleAreaCited byStatus
US5322547A Method for indirect chemical reduction of metals in waste Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 153 Expired
US5202100A Method for reducing volume of a radioactive composition Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 143 Expired
US5324341A Method for chemically reducing metals in waste compositions Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 136 Expired
US5358549A Method of indirect chemical reduction of metals in waste Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 130 Expired
US5489734A Method for producing a non-radioactive product from a radioactive waste Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 118 Expired
US5640707A Method of organic homologation employing organic-containing feeds Chemistry; Metallurgy 110 Expired
US5629464A Method for forming unsaturated organics from organic-containing feed by employing a Bronsted acid Chemistry; Metallurgy 109 Expired
US5717149A Method for producing halogenated products from metal halide feeds Physics 108 Expired
US5543558A Method for producing unsaturated organics from organic-containing feeds Chemistry; Metallurgy 108 Expired
US6096109A Chemical component recovery from ligated-metals Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 107 Expired
US4574714A Destruction of toxic chemicals Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 100 Expired
US4602574A Destruction of toxic organic chemicals Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 93 Expired
US8303916B2 Gaseous transfer in multiple metal bath reactors Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 13 Active
US12198106B2 Hot-desking station and system Electricity 0 Active
US12307422B2 Hot desk booking using user badge Electricity 0 Active
US8808411B2 Gaseous transfer in multiple metal bath reactors Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 0 Active
US11941585B2 Hot desk booking using user badge Electricity 0 Active

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