Inventor · San Francisco, CA, US

Timothy Powers

13Patents
6h-index
39Co-inventors
62Inventor score

Filing activity: Jul 22, 1997 → Jun 27, 2013

Most-cited inventions

PatentTitleAreaCited byStatus
US6030917A Combinatorial synthesis and analysis of organometallic compounds and catalysts Physics 247 Expired
US6043363A Substituted aminomethylphosphines, compositions and coordination complexes of same, their synthesis and processes using same Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 82 Expired
US6248540A Combinatorial synthesis and analysis of organometallic compounds and homogeneous catalysts Physics 72 Expired
US6177528A Substituted aminomethylphosphines, compositions and coordination complexes of same, their synthesis and processes using same Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 38 Expired
US6124476A Catalyst ligands, catalyst compositions, catalyst metal complexes and processes for cross-coupling aromatic boron compounds with aromatic halogens or perfluoroalkylsulfonates Performing Operations; Transporting 29 Expired
US6670298B1 Combinatorial synthesis and analysis of organometallic compounds and catalysts Physics 13 Expired
US6756195B2 Polymerization method from the combinatorial synthesis and analysis of organometallic compounds and catalysts Physics 5 Expired
US9296698B2 Amino heteroaryl compounds as beta-secretase modulators and methods of use Chemistry; Metallurgy 4 Active
US9012446B2 Amino-oxazines and amino-dihydrothiazine compounds as beta-secretase modulators and methods of use Chemistry; Metallurgy 4 Active
US8497264B2 Amino-oxazines and amino-dihydrothiazine compounds as beta-secretase modulators and methods of use Chemistry; Metallurgy 4 Active
US8735384B2 Amino heteroaryl compounds as beta-secretase modulators and methods of use Chemistry; Metallurgy 0 Active
US8822485B2 Amino heteroaryl compounds as beta-secretase modulators and methods of use Chemistry; Metallurgy 0 Active
US6407087B1 UCF116 derivatives Chemistry; Metallurgy 0 Expired

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