Inventor · Concord, MA, US

Vinod M. Jalan

15Patents
11h-index
13Co-inventors
65Inventor score

Filing activity: Nov 23, 1977 → Jan 19, 1995

Most-cited inventions

PatentTitleAreaCited byStatus
US4186110A Noble metal-refractory metal alloys as catalysts and method for making Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 54 Expired
US4136059A Method for producing highly dispersed catalytic platinum Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 44 Expired
US4454649A Chromium electrodes for REDOX cells Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 40 Expired
US4192907A Electrochemical cell electrodes incorporating noble metal-base metal alloy catalysts Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 38 Expired
US5079107A Cathode alloy electrocatalysts Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 32 Expired
US4455286A High-temperature sorbent method for removal of sulfur containing gases from gaseous mixtures Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 28 Expired
US4442078A Method of removing hydrogen sulfide from gases utilizing a zinc oxide sorbent and regenerating the sorbent Performing Operations; Transporting 26 Expired
US5306476A Continuous sulfur removal process Chemistry; Metallurgy 26 Expired
US5476826A Process for producing carbon black having affixed nitrogen Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 26 Expired
US4202934A Noble metal/vanadium alloy catalyst and method for making Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 24 Expired
US5213779A Process for optimizing the removal of NO.sub.X and SO.sub.X from gases utilizing lanthanide compounds Chemistry; Metallurgy 17 Expired
US4137373A Platinum catalyst and method for making Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 10 Expired
US4137372A Catalyst and method for making Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 6 Expired
US5607784A Hydrogen/fluorine power generating system Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 5 Expired
US4795684A Fuel cell electrocatalyst support comprising an ultra-fine chainy-structured titanium carbide Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 4 Expired

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