Patents Represented by Attorney, Agent or Law Firm Frederick W. Niebuhr, Esq.
  • Patent number: 5561515
    Abstract: An aerodynamic particle size measuring device includes a laser energy source and beam splitting, shaping and polarizing optics for forming two parallel, peripherally overlapping beams. The beams are caused to intersect a gas stream perpendicular to the direction of gas flow, thus to form a measuring volume at the intersection of the beams and flow. Single particles are carried through the measuring volume with the gas flow, each particle scattering and extinguishing light according to the beam profile, as predetermined by the degree of beam overlap and the Gaussian intensity distribution of each beam. A photodetector, responsive either to scattered light or light extinction, generates a time-dependent voltage profile that tends to replicate the intensity profile. The resulting electrical signal is processed to determine an amplitude, set a threshold for minimally acceptable amplitudes, and to derive two negative-going zero crossings for an unambiguous time/velocity determination.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 7, 1994
    Date of Patent: October 1, 1996
    Assignee: TSI Incorporated
    Inventors: Peter P. Hairston, Frank D. Dorman, Gilmore J. Sem, Jugal K. Agarwal
  • Patent number: 5555598
    Abstract: A continuous flow recycling surface cleaning device includes a cleaning tool head incorporating a nozzle arrangement to enhance surface cleaning and drying. The head includes a shell that engages a surface being cleaned to form an enclosed chamber. A partition divides the chamber into intake and evacuation compartments. A row of nozzles is mounted to the shell to spray liquid cleaning solution into the intake compartment. Air enters the receiving sector through slots near the nozzles and between a forward portion of the shell and the floor, and is drawn beyond the partition into the evacuation compartment by a vacuum source. Each of the nozzles generates a sheet-like, fan-shaped spray pattern. The nozzles are arranged to form adjacent spray patterns that overlap one another longitudinally (lengthwise of the elongate shell) but are separated from one another to avoid interference between adjacent spray patterns.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: April 4, 1995
    Date of Patent: September 17, 1996
    Assignee: CFR Corporation
    Inventors: Dale L. Grave, Sung K. Cho
  • Patent number: 5551427
    Abstract: An implantable devices for the effective elimination of an arrhythmogenic site from the myocardium is presented. By inserting small biocompatible conductors and/or insulators into the heart tissue at the arrhythmogenic site, it is possible to effectively eliminate a portion of the tissue from the electric field and current paths within the heart. The device would act as an alternative to the standard techniques for the removal of tissue from the effective contribution to the hearts electrical action which require the destruction of tissue via energy transfer (RF, microwave, cryogenic, etc.). This device is a significant improvement in the state of the art in that it does not require tissue necrosis.In one preferred embodiment the device is a non conductive helix that is permanently implanted into the heart wall around the arrhythmogenic site.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: February 13, 1995
    Date of Patent: September 3, 1996
    Inventor: Peter A. Altman
  • Patent number: 5548419
    Abstract: A holographic particle image velocimeter employs stereoscopic recording of particle images, taken from two different perspectives and at two distinct points in time for each perspective, on a single holographic film plate. The different perspectives are provided by two optical assemblies, each including a collecting lens, a prism and a focusing lens. Collimated laser energy is pulsed through a fluid stream, with elements carried in the stream scattering light, some of which is collected by each collecting lens. The respective focusing lenses are configured to form images of the scattered light near the holographic plate. The particle images stored on the plate are reconstructed using the same optical assemblies employed in recording, by transferring the film plate and optical assemblies as a single integral unit to a reconstruction site.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: June 20, 1994
    Date of Patent: August 20, 1996
    Assignee: University of Illinois
    Inventors: Ronald J. Adrian, Donald H. Barnhart, George A. Papen