Thomas Vanhercke
16Patents
5h-index
14Co-inventors
59Inventor score
Filing activity: Jun 28, 2011 → Nov 21, 2023
Most-cited inventions
| Patent | Title | Area | Cited by | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| US8735111B2 | Processes for producing hydrocarbon products | Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies | 38 | Active |
| US8809026B2 | Processes for producing lipids | Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies | 23 | Active |
| US9061992B2 | Processes for producing hydrocarbon products | Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies | 12 | Active |
| US9127288B2 | Methods of producing lipids | Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies | 11 | Active |
| US9512438B2 | Processes for producing hydrocarbon products | Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies | 8 | Active |
| US9499829B2 | Processes for producing lipids | Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies | 5 | Active |
| US10246718B2 | Processes for producing lipids | Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies | 3 | Active |
| US10925293B2 | Methods of producing lipids | Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies | 3 | Active |
| US10472587B2 | Processes for producing industrial products from plant lipids | Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies | 2 | Active |
| US11859193B2 | Plants with modified traits | Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies | 1 | Active |
| US12421523B2 | Plants with modified traits | Chemistry; Metallurgy | 0 | Active |
| US10246641B2 | Processes for producing hydrocarbon products | Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies | 0 | Active |
| US11639507B2 | Processes for producing lipids | Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies | 0 | Active |
| US11365369B2 | Processes for producing industrial products from plant lipids | Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies | 0 | Active |
| US11913006B2 | Plants producing modified levels of medium chain fatty acids | Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies | 0 | Active |
| US11814600B2 | Process for producing industrial products from plant lipids | Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies | 0 | Active |
Source: USPTO / EPO open patent data. Inventor disambiguation is heuristic; counts are objective bibliographic measures.