Inventor · Jurançon, FR

Xavier Marcarian

12Patents
2h-index
9Co-inventors
47Inventor score

Filing activity: Jul 9, 1999 → Oct 15, 2018

Most-cited inventions

PatentTitleAreaCited byStatus
US10793505B2 Unit and process for purification of crude methyl methacrylate Chemistry; Metallurgy 15 Active
US6107444A Thermoplastic composition based on a transparent thermoplastic (co) polymer containing polyamide particles which can be used for light-scattering shaped articles Chemistry; Metallurgy 10 Expired
US6590052B2 Process for continuous polymerization with micromixing of reactive fluids Performing Operations; Transporting 1 Expired
US10131614B2 Esterification unit for producing crude methyl methacrylate, esterification process using said unit and plant comprising said unit Performing Operations; Transporting 0 Active
US9840458B2 Thermal conversion vessel used in a process for amidification of acetone cyanohydrin Performing Operations; Transporting 0 Active
US6892958B2 Process for the continuous polymerization with micromixing of reactive fluids Performing Operations; Transporting 0 Expired
US9944533B2 Installation and process for the preparation of hydrogen cyanide Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 0 Active
US10358410B2 Thermal conversion vessel used in a process for amidification of acetone cyanohydrin Performing Operations; Transporting 0 Active
US10865118B2 Installation and process for the preparation of hydrogen cyanide Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 0 Active
US10273199B2 Hydrolysis vessel used in a process for amidification of acetone cyanohydrin Performing Operations; Transporting 0 Active
US10597302B2 Reactor for preparing hydrogen cyanide by the andrussow process, equipment comprising said reactor and process using such an equipment Chemistry; Metallurgy 0 Active
US11084774B2 Esterification unit for producing crude methyl methacrylate, esterification process using said unit and plant comprising said unit Performing Operations; Transporting 0 Active

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