Patents by Inventor Thomas N. Kirchner

Thomas N. Kirchner 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: 6841728
    Abstract: A machine for the automated assembly of wafers such as solar cells into strings, comprising a control system, a cell loader with wafer inspection station, a cell tab loader, a string assembly station, and a platen with adjacent pairs of individual cell, opposing edge grippers having multiple sets of vertically operable pincer action fingers for holding cells in string alignment during soldering. The string assembly station has a cooperating cell support and tab tail support mechanism providing for a tab tail hand off from one to the other with a platen indexing movements of cell pitch distance. The platen moves from the string assembly station through a soldering station consisting of a preheat, soldering, and cooling zones spaced a cell pitch distance apart. A string unloader moves completed strings through a string inspection station placing strings in a good or bad string holding area.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: April 18, 2002
    Date of Patent: January 11, 2005
    Assignee: G.T. Equipment Technologies, Inc.
    Inventors: Bernard D. Jones, Eric de Rivera, Alleppey V. Hariharan, Steven T. Slavsky, Thomas S. McGee, David W. Lackey, Thomas N. Kirchner
  • Publication number: 20030127124
    Abstract: A machine for the automated assembly of wafers such as solar cells into strings, comprising a control system, a cell loader with wafer inspection station, a cell tab loader, a string assembly station, and a platen with adjacent pairs of individual cell, opposing edge grippers having multiple sets of vertically operable pincer action fingers for holding cells in string alignment during soldering. The string assembly station has a cooperating cell support and tab tail support mechanism providing for a tab tail hand off from one to the other with a platen indexing movements of cell pitch distance. The platen moves from the string assembly station through a soldering station consisting of a preheat, soldering, and cooling zones spaced a cell pitch distance apart. A string unloader moves completed strings through a string inspection station placing strings in a good or bad string holding area.
    Type: Application
    Filed: April 18, 2002
    Publication date: July 10, 2003
    Inventors: Bernard D. Jones, Eric de Rivera, Alleppey V. Hariharan, Steven T. Slavsky, Thomas S. McGee, David W. Lackey, Thomas N. Kirchner