Patents by Inventor Kingsley St John Reavell

Kingsley St John Reavell 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: 6828794
    Abstract: An electrostatic instrument for measuring particle concentrations and possibly sizes in aerosols, such as an Electrostatic Low Pressure Impactor or Differential Mobility Analyser suffers from errors which limit the useful response bandwidth of the device. The invention minimises or eliminates these transient errors which are caused by changing particle concentrations in the aerosol. A system may be added to an otherwise conventional instrument to compensate for the transient effects based on a model of the charge production mechanism. Alternatively, a screening electrode placed over the sense electrodes in the instrument, and held at controlled electrical potential difference, is added to the instrument to eliminate the effect. A third embodiment adds compensating electrodes which provide a direct measurement of the transient effect which can be subtracted from the signal.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 24, 2002
    Date of Patent: December 7, 2004
    Assignee: Cambustion Limited
    Inventors: Kingsley St John Reavell, Nicholas Collings
  • Publication number: 20040080321
    Abstract: An electrostatic instrument for measuring particle concentrations and possibly sizes in aerosols, such as an Electrostatic Low Pressure Impactor or Differential Mobility Analyser suffers from errors which limit the useful response bandwidth of the device. The invention minimises or eliminates these transient errors which are caused by changing particle concentrations in the aerosol. A system may be added to an otherwise conventional instrument to compensate for the transient effects based on a model of the charge production mechanism. Alternatively, a screening electrode placed over the sense electrodes in the instrument, and held at controlled electrical potential difference, is added to the instrument to eliminate the effect. A third embodiment adds compensating electrodes which provide a direct measurement of the transient effect which can be subtracted from the signal.
    Type: Application
    Filed: October 24, 2002
    Publication date: April 29, 2004
    Inventors: Kingsley St. John Reavell, Nicholas Collings