Patents by Inventor Ken B. Cooper

Ken B. Cooper has filed for patents to protect the following inventions. This listing includes patent applications that are pending as well as patents that have already been granted by the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO).

  • Patent number: 10100858
    Abstract: A silicon alignment pin is used to align successive layer of component made in semiconductor chips and/or metallic components to make easier the assembly of devices having a layered structure. The pin is made as a compressible structure which can be squeezed to reduce its outer diameter, have one end fit into a corresponding alignment pocket or cavity defined in a layer of material to be assembled into a layered structure, and then allowed to expand to produce an interference fit with the cavity. The other end can then be inserted into a corresponding cavity defined in a surface of a second layer of material that mates with the first layer. The two layers are in registry when the pin is mated to both. Multiple layers can be assembled to create a multilayer structure. Examples of such devices are presented.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 28, 2016
    Date of Patent: October 16, 2018
    Assignee: CALIFORNIA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY
    Inventors: Cecile Jung-Kubiak, Theodore Reck, Bertrand Thomas, Robert H. Lin, Alejandro Peralta, John J. Gill, Choonsup Lee, Jose V. Siles, Risaku Toda, Goutam Chattopadhyay, Ken B. Cooper, Imran Mehdi
  • Patent number: 10075151
    Abstract: A solid state device chip including diodes (generating a higher frequency output through frequency multiplication of the input frequency) and a novel on-chip power combining design. Together with the on-chip power combining, the chip has increased efficiency because the diodes' anodes, being micro-fabricated simultaneously on the same patch of a GaAs wafer under identical conditions, are very well balanced. The diodes' GaAs heterostructure and the overall chip geometry are designed to be optimized for high power operation. As a result of all these features, the device can generate record-setting power having a signal frequency in the F-band and W-band (30% conversion efficiency).
    Type: Grant
    Filed: November 25, 2015
    Date of Patent: September 11, 2018
    Assignee: California Institute of Technology
    Inventors: Jose Vicente Siles Perez, Choonsup Lee, Goutam Chattopadhyay, Ken B. Cooper, Imran Mehdi, Robert H. Lin, Alejandro Peralta
  • Patent number: 9791321
    Abstract: A multi-pixel terahertz transceiver is constructed using a stack of semiconductor layers that communicate using vias defined within the semiconductor layers. By using a stack of semiconductor layers, the various electrical functions of each layer can be tested easily without having to assemble the entire transceiver. In addition, the design allows the production of a transceiver having pixels set 10 mm apart.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: May 24, 2013
    Date of Patent: October 17, 2017
    Assignee: California Institute of Technology
    Inventors: Goutam Chattopadhyay, Ken B. Cooper, Emmanuel Decrossas, John J. Gill, Cecile Jung-Kubiak, Choonsup Lee, Robert Lin, Imran Mehdi, Alejandro Peralta, Theodore Reck, Jose Siles
  • Publication number: 20170045065
    Abstract: A silicon alignment pin is used to align successive layer of component made in semiconductor chips and/or metallic components to make easier the assembly of devices having a layered structure. The pin is made as a compressible structure which can be squeezed to reduce its outer diameter, have one end fit into a corresponding alignment pocket or cavity defined in a layer of material to be assembled into a layered structure, and then allowed to expand to produce an interference fit with the cavity. The other end can then be inserted into a corresponding cavity defined in a surface of a second layer of material that mates with the first layer. The two layers are in registry when the pin is mated to both. Multiple layers can be assembled to create a multilayer structure. Examples of such devices are presented.
    Type: Application
    Filed: October 28, 2016
    Publication date: February 16, 2017
    Inventors: Cecile JUNG-KUBIAK, Theodore RECK, Bertrand THOMAS, Robert H. LIN, Alejandro PERALTA, John J. GILL, Choonsup LEE, Jose V. SILES, Risaku TODA, Goutam CHATTOPADHYAY, Ken B. COOPER, Imran MEHDI
  • Patent number: 9512863
    Abstract: A silicon alignment pin is used to align successive layers of components made in semiconductor chips and/or metallic components to make easier the assembly of devices having a layered structure. The pin is made as a compressible structure which can be squeezed to reduce its outer diameter, have one end fit into a corresponding alignment pocket or cavity defined in a layer of material to be assembled into a layered structure, and then allowed to expand to produce an interference fit with the cavity. The other end can then be inserted into a corresponding cavity defined in a surface of a second layer of material that mates with the first layer. The two layers are in registry when the pin is mated to both. Multiple layers can be assembled to create a multilayer structure. Examples of such devices are presented.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: April 26, 2013
    Date of Patent: December 6, 2016
    Assignee: CALIFORNIA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY
    Inventors: Cecile Jung-Kubiak, Theodore Reck, Bertrand Thomas, Robert H. Lin, Alejandro Peralta, John J. Gill, Choonsup Lee, Jose V. Siles, Risaku Toda, Goutam Chattopadhyay, Ken B. Cooper, Imran Mehdi
  • Patent number: 9461352
    Abstract: A multi-step silicon etching process has been developed to fabricate silicon-based terahertz (THz) waveguide components. This technique provides precise dimensional control across multiple etch depths with batch processing capabilities. Nonlinear and passive components such as mixers and multipliers waveguides, hybrids, OMTs and twists have been fabricated and integrated into a small silicon package. This fabrication technique enables a wafer-stacking architecture to provide ultra-compact multi-pixel receiver front-ends in the THz range.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: April 15, 2014
    Date of Patent: October 4, 2016
    Assignee: California Institute of Technology
    Inventors: Cecile Jung-Kubiak, Theodore Reck, Goutam Chattopadhyay, Jose Vicente Siles Perez, Robert H. Lin, Imran Mehdi, Choonsup Lee, Ken B. Cooper, Alejandro Peralta
  • Publication number: 20160149562
    Abstract: A solid state device chip including diodes (generating a higher frequency output through frequency multiplication of the input frequency) and a novel on-chip power combining design. Together with the on-chip power combining, the chip has increased efficiency because the diodes' anodes, being micro-fabricated simultaneously on the same patch of a GaAs wafer under identical conditions, are very well balanced. The diodes' GaAs heterostructure and the overall chip geometry are designed to be optimized for high power operation. As a result of all these features, the device can generate record-setting power having a signal frequency in the F-band and W-band (30% conversion efficiency).
    Type: Application
    Filed: November 25, 2015
    Publication date: May 26, 2016
    Inventors: Jose Vicente Siles Perez, Choonsup Lee, Goutam Chattopadhyay, Ken B. Cooper, Imran Mehdi, Robert H. Lin, Alejandro Peralta
  • Publication number: 20150300884
    Abstract: A multi-pixel terahertz transceiver is constructed using a stack of semiconductor layers that communicate using vias defined within the semiconductor layers. By using a stack of semiconductor layers, the various electrical functions of each layer can be tested easily without having to assemble the entire transceiver. In addition, the design allows the production of a transceiver having pixels set 10 mm apart.
    Type: Application
    Filed: May 24, 2013
    Publication date: October 22, 2015
    Applicant: CALIFORNIA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY
    Inventors: Theodore Reck, Ken B. Cooper, Cecile Jung-Kubiak, Choonsup Lee, John J. Gill
  • Publication number: 20140340178
    Abstract: A multi-step silicon etching process has been developed to fabricate silicon-based terahertz (THz) waveguide components. This technique provides precise dimensional control across multiple etch depths with batch processing capabilities. Nonlinear and passive components such as mixers and multipliers waveguides, hybrids, OMTs and twists have been fabricated and integrated into a small silicon package. This fabrication technique enables a wafer-stacking architecture to provide ultra-compact multi-pixel receiver front-ends in the THz range.
    Type: Application
    Filed: April 15, 2014
    Publication date: November 20, 2014
    Applicant: CALIFORNIA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY
    Inventors: Cecile Jung-Kubiak, Theodore Reck, Goutam Chattopadhyay, Jose Vicente Siles Perez, Robert H. Lin, Imran Mehdi, Choonsup Lee, Ken B. Cooper, Alejandro Peralta
  • Publication number: 20140147192
    Abstract: A silicon alignment pin is used to align successive layers of components made in semiconductor chips and/or metallic components to make easier the assembly of devices having a layered structure. The pin is made as a compressible structure which can be squeezed to reduce its outer diameter, have one end fit into a corresponding alignment pocket or cavity defined in a layer of material to be assembled into a layered structure, and then allowed to expand to produce an interference fit with the cavity. The other end can then be inserted into a corresponding cavity defined in a surface of a second layer of material that mates with the first layer. The two layers are in registry when the pin is mated to both. Multiple layers can be assembled to create a multilayer structure. Examples of such devices are presented.
    Type: Application
    Filed: April 26, 2013
    Publication date: May 29, 2014
    Applicant: CALIFORNIA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY
    Inventors: Cecile Jung-Kubiak, Theodore Reck, Bertrand Thomas, Robert H. Lin, Alejandro Peralta, John J. Gill, Choonsup Lee, Jose V. Siles, Risaku Toda, Goutam Chattopadhyay, Ken B. Cooper, Imran Mehdi
  • Patent number: 8144052
    Abstract: A three-dimensional imaging radar operating at high frequency e.g., 670 GHz radar using low phase-noise synthesizers and a fast chirper to generate a frequency-modulated continuous-wave (FMCW) waveform, is disclosed that operates with a multiplexed beam to obtain range information simultaneously on multiple pixels of a target. A source transmit beam may be divided by a hybrid coupler into multiple transmit beams multiplexed together and directed to be reflected off a target and return as a single receive beam which is demultiplexed and processed to reveal range information of separate pixels of the target associated with each transmit beam simultaneously. The multiple transmit beams may be developed with appropriate optics to be temporally and spatially differentiated before being directed to the target. Temporal differentiation corresponds to a different intermediate frequencies separating the range information of the multiple pixels.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 15, 2009
    Date of Patent: March 27, 2012
    Assignee: California Institute of Technology
    Inventors: Ken B. Cooper, Robert J. Dengler, Peter H. Siegel, Goutam Chattopadhyay, John S. Ward, Nuria Llombart Juan, Tomas E. Bryllert, Imran Mehdi, Jan A. Tarsala
  • Patent number: 7773205
    Abstract: A three-dimensional imaging radar operating at high frequency e.g., 670 GHz, is disclosed. The active target illumination inherent in radar solves the problem of low signal power and narrow-band detection by using submillimeter heterodyne mixer receivers. A submillimeter imaging radar may use low phase-noise synthesizers and a fast chirper to generate a frequency-modulated continuous-wave (FMCW) waveform. Three-dimensional images are generated through range information derived for each pixel scanned over a target. A peak finding algorithm may be used in processing for each pixel to differentiate material layers of the target. Improved focusing is achieved through a compensation signal sampled from a point source calibration target and applied to received signals from active targets prior to FFT-based range compression to extract and display high-resolution target images. Such an imaging radar has particular application in detecting concealed weapons or contraband.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: June 6, 2008
    Date of Patent: August 10, 2010
    Assignee: California Institute of Technology
    Inventors: Ken B. Cooper, Goutam Chattopadhyay, Peter H. Siegel, Robert J. Dengler, Erich T. Schlecht, Imran Mehdi, Anders J. Skalare
  • Publication number: 20100090887
    Abstract: A three-dimensional imaging radar operating at high frequency e.g., 670 GHz radar using low phase-noise synthesizers and a fast chirper to generate a frequency-modulated continuous-wave (FMCW) waveform, is disclosed that operates with a multiplexed beam to obtain range information simultaneously on multiple pixels of a target. A source transmit beam may be divided by a hybrid coupler into multiple transmit beams multiplexed together and directed to be reflected off a target and return as a single receive beam which is demultiplexed and processed to reveal range information of separate pixels of the target associated with each transmit beam simultaneously. The multiple transmit beams may be developed with appropriate optics to be temporally and spatially differentiated before being directed to the target. Temporal differentiation corresponds to a different intermediate frequencies separating the range information of the multiple pixels.
    Type: Application
    Filed: October 15, 2009
    Publication date: April 15, 2010
    Applicant: California Institute of Technology
    Inventors: Ken B. Cooper, Robert J. Dengler, Peter H. Siegel, Goutam Chattopadhyay, John S. Ward, Nuria Llombart Juan, Tomas E. Bryllert, Imran Mehdi, Jan A. Tarsala
  • Publication number: 20080304044
    Abstract: A three-dimensional imaging radar operating at high frequency e.g., 670 GHz, is disclosed. The active target illumination inherent in radar solves the problem of low signal power and narrow-band detection by using submillimeter heterodyne mixer receivers. A submillimeter imaging radar may use low phase-noise synthesizers and a fast chirper to generate a frequency-modulated continuous-wave (FMCW) waveform. Three-dimensional images are generated through range information derived for each pixel scanned over a target. A peak finding algorithm may be used in processing for each pixel to differentiate material layers of the target. Improved focusing is achieved through a compensation signal sampled from a point source calibration target and applied to received signals from active targets prior to FFT-based range compression to extract and display high-resolution target images. Such an imaging radar has particular application in detecting concealed weapons or contraband.
    Type: Application
    Filed: June 6, 2008
    Publication date: December 11, 2008
    Applicant: California Institute of Technology
    Inventors: Ken B. Cooper, Goutam Chattopadhyay, Peter H. Siegel, Robert J. Dengler, Erich T. Schlecht, Imran Mehdi, Anders J. Skalare