Patents Represented by Attorney James L. Neal
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Patent number: 7753854Abstract: A technique is disclosed for determining blood flow in a living body by changing the thermal energy level in the venous blood flow path and determining temperatures in both the venous and arterial blood flow paths. Blood flow is calculated as a function of the change in energy level and the temperature differences in the venous and arterial blood flow paths.Type: GrantFiled: March 2, 2009Date of Patent: July 13, 2010Assignee: Thermal Technologies, IncInventor: Harry Frederick Bowman
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Patent number: 7682317Abstract: The system assesses the endothelial function of a subject. Particularly, peripheral tissue perfusion measurements taken in a subject are compared to reference perfusion data and the comparison yields the assessment of endothelial function. The reference may be data indicative of peripheral tissue perfusion in a healthy person. Also, peripheral tissue perfusion measurements taken in a subject when perfusion is in an unperturbed state (the reference) can be compared to perfusion measurements taken promptly after a challenge to normal or unperturbed tissue perfusion of the subject.Type: GrantFiled: April 3, 2003Date of Patent: March 23, 2010Assignee: Thermal Technologies, Inc.Inventors: Harry Frederick Bowman, Gregory T. Martin
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Patent number: 7527598Abstract: A technique is disclosed for determining blood flow in a living body by changing the thermal energy level in the venous blood flow path and determining temperatures in both the venous and arterial blood flow paths. Blood flow is calculated as a function of the change in energy level and the temperature differences in the venous and arterial blood flow paths.Type: GrantFiled: March 24, 2004Date of Patent: May 5, 2009Assignee: Thermal Technologies, Inc.Inventor: Harry Frederick Bowman
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Patent number: 6488677Abstract: A system is provided for monitoring edema in tissue. Thermal energy is supplied to tissue at a site where tissue water content is to be monitored to produce in the selected tissue a thermal response as a function of an intrinsic thermal property of tissue that varies with water content. Tissue water content is determined from the thermal response, the energy supplied and the relationship between tissue water content and the thermal property.Type: GrantFiled: May 10, 2001Date of Patent: December 3, 2002Assignee: Thermal Technologies, Inc.Inventors: Harry Frederick Bowman, Gregory T. Martin
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Patent number: 5692514Abstract: A technique for determining blood flow in a living body by changing the thermal energy level by a predetermined amount at a site in a blood flow path and detecting temperatures at locations upstream and downstream of the site. The temperature difference at such locations is determined and the blood flow is calculated as a function of the change in energy level and of the temperature differences measured prior to and following the change in energy level.Type: GrantFiled: May 24, 1995Date of Patent: December 2, 1997Assignee: Thermal Technologies, Inc.Inventor: Harry Frederick Bowman
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Patent number: 4381408Abstract: A method and apparatus are disclosed for extracting amine compounds from air samples without loss due to formation of nitrosamine artifacts. The apparatus includes a cartridge having a separation zone between a first port and a second port. The separation zone contains an air pervious packing of a granular, solid phase amine complexing agent. The method includes a first step of driving an air sample through the separation zone of the cartridge from the first port to the second port, and a second step of driving an eluent through the separation zone from the second port to the first port, or backflushing the cartridge. To extract amine compounds, the eluent is a solvent for the amine complexing agent in the separation zone of the cartridge. The method may contain the further step of determining the amine compound concentration of at least a portion of the eluate which passes from the separation zone following the second step of the method.Type: GrantFiled: December 1, 1980Date of Patent: April 26, 1983Assignee: Thermo Electron CorporationInventors: David P. Rounbehler, John W. Reisch
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Patent number: 4374660Abstract: A glass batch preheater in one stage of which hot flue gases from a glass melting furnace are passed through a bed of cullet and a bed of glass batch material. The bed of cullet, while being heated, filters dust and other particles from the hot flue gases while the bed of glass batch materials is simultaneously heated and fluidized. An alternative preheater includes a first stage and a second supplementary stage to further heat the glass batch material. A separate stage may also be used for elutriation of glass particles. Steam may be injected to provide moisture to the glass batch and for other purposes.Type: GrantFiled: August 18, 1981Date of Patent: February 22, 1983Assignee: Thermo Electron CorporationInventors: Ravinder K. Sakhuja, William E. Cole, Dimitris Pavlakis
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Patent number: 4373702Abstract: Heat-treating apparatus which includes an insulated furnace compartment through which stock to be heat-treated is passed. Perforated tubes are arranged in the furnace and they are heated to radiance by burners which also generate products of combustion which are ejected through the perforations at high velocity to impinge upon a surface or surfaces of the stock being heat-treated. The combination of radiation and convection enhanced by the impingement of the jets upon a surface of the stock provides highly efficient primary heat transfer. The burners are designed to insure that rapid combustion takes place at a point removed from the perforations to avoid flame issuing from the perforations. The tubes are sized and spaced to enhance secondary heat transfer from gases in the furnace compartment and from the walls of the compartment to the stock.Type: GrantFiled: May 14, 1981Date of Patent: February 15, 1983Assignee: Holcroft & CompanyInventors: Viswanath Jayaraman, Carroll Cone
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Patent number: 4363328Abstract: An inhalation device for use in breathing exercises is described. The exerciser includes a thin-walled bellows whose upper end is attached to a top housing member and whose lower end deflects upward upon withdrawal of air from an opening in the upper end of the bellows. Deflection of the bellows allows accurate measurement of the volume of air inhaled by a patient and a true indication whether an inhaled breath is being held. Slotted support arms connecting the top housing member and a bottom housing member permit collapse of the device for storage and shipment of the exerciser as a compact unit. A weight attached to the lower end of the bellows provides a biasing force to assure return of the bellows to a fully extended position even after long-term storage of the device in collapsed form.Type: GrantFiled: November 5, 1980Date of Patent: December 14, 1982Assignee: Thermo Electron Corp.Inventors: Victor L. Poirier, Stanley D. Buczak, Robert F. Lynch, Thomas R. Salvo
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Patent number: 4348765Abstract: A thermally pumped laser. The laser features an emitter, a collector spaced apart from the emitter, and reflecting elements adjacent to the space between the emitter and collector to form a cavity. A heat source is provided for heating the emitter to drive electrons from the emitter to the collector. Vapor such as cesium vapor is disposed in the cavity between the emitter and the collector to form the lasing medium. An additive selected to be in resonance with specific excited states of the atoms may be intermixed with the chosen vapor. The additive assists in depopulating the specific states of the atoms, thereby creating or enhancing a population inversion in the atoms of the vapor so that lasing may occur. The laser may be operated both in a pulsed and in a d.c. mode.Type: GrantFiled: February 25, 1980Date of Patent: September 7, 1982Assignee: Thermo Electron CorporationInventor: Peter E. Oettinger
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Patent number: 4346330Abstract: Apparatus is disclosed for generating high density pulses of electrons thermionically. The apparatus includes a metallic target maintained within a low pressure cesium vapor atmosphere. A laser rapidly heats the cesiated target surface to a high temperature in a time short compared with the residence time of cesium atoms adsorbed on the target surface. This rapid surface heating in combination with the adsorbed cesium atoms emits copious quantities of electrons forming a high current density pulse.Type: GrantFiled: April 14, 1980Date of Patent: August 24, 1982Assignee: Thermo Electron CorporationInventors: Chunghsin Lee, Peter E. Oettinger
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Patent number: 4343395Abstract: A high temperature furnace chamber includes a roller hearth for supporting and transporting workpieces to be heated. The rollers are supported at each end by a rotary sleeve having an inner diameter larger than the outer diameter of the rollers. Rotary movement of the sleeves transmits rotational forces to the rollers. Clearance provided between the rollers and the sleeves allows for roller dimensional variation during various furnace operating conditions.Type: GrantFiled: November 10, 1977Date of Patent: August 10, 1982Assignee: Holcroft & Co.Inventors: Charles Lippert, Leonard G. Nowak, Paul K. Shefsiek
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Patent number: 4335684Abstract: A fuel slurry and engine systems for using the slurry are disclosed. The fuel slurry is a uniform mixture of water and 20 to 50 percent by weight of particulate coal of maximum size equal to 20 microns, the small size promoting complete combustion of the coal and minimizing engine wear due to particles of ash. Engine systems for utilizing the slurry of micronized coal and water are described, the preferred system including a slow-speed, two-stroke turbo-charged diesel engine. Preferred compositions of the fuel slurry are discussed and their behavior in engine systems is analyzed. Also disclosed are techniques for enhancing its ignition.Type: GrantFiled: September 22, 1980Date of Patent: June 22, 1982Assignee: Thermo Electron CorporationInventor: Jerry P. Davis
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Patent number: 4320288Abstract: A dual mode solar tracking method and system in which a sensor of radiation from the sun normally tracks the sun at a rate determined by a priori information, departure from normal tracking and correction for tracking rate errors being introduced only when the errors exceed a predetermined value and the strength of radiation from the sun exceeds a predetermined threshold value.Type: GrantFiled: April 25, 1980Date of Patent: March 16, 1982Assignee: Thermo Electron CorporationInventor: Ronald S. Schlarlack
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Patent number: 4301114Abstract: A molecular sieve trap is disclosed for selective trapping of substances in a gas stream, the trap being particularly useful in systems for detecting nitrogen compounds such as N-nitrosamines or nitrogen oxides in a sample. The trap comprises a cartridge containing a packing of a granular adsorbent molecular sieve material with a carefully controlled pore size of about ten angstroms and a preference for adsorbing polar substances. The packing readily passes NO and NO.sub.2 gases in a gas stream directed through the trap while trapping and retaining larger and/or more polar molecules such as those of double-bonded carbon compounds and sulfur compounds which could otherwise interfere with subsequent measurement of the NO or NO.sub.x content of the gas stream. An N-nitroso compound detection system incorporating the molecular sieve trap is described wherein the molecular sieve trap is interposed between a pyrolyzer and a chemiluminescent NO detector to selectively trap substances in the reactor effluent.Type: GrantFiled: June 30, 1980Date of Patent: November 17, 1981Assignee: Thermo Electron CorporationInventors: David P. Rounbehler, John W. Reisch
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Patent number: 4299236Abstract: An inhalation device for use in respiratory therapy is described. The inhalation device or incentive breathing exerciser includes an inner bellows whose deflection allows accurate measurement of the initial volume of air inhaled by a patient and an outer bellows for measuring larger volumes of air after a valve in the inner bellows opens. The exerciser permits measurement of the true volume of air inhaled by a patient and is equipped with a simple timer for measuring the interval of time an inhaled breath is held. Removable handles and the flexible bellows permit collapse of the device for storage and shipment as a compact unit.Type: GrantFiled: October 22, 1979Date of Patent: November 10, 1981Assignee: Thermo Electron CorporationInventor: Victor L. Poirier
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Patent number: 4298798Abstract: A method and apparatus are described for producing negative deuterium ions for use in controlled thermonuclear reactions such as fusion. Negative ions are obtained by bombarding the surface of an ionization electrode with positive ions and extracting negative ions from the electrode. The unique surface layer of the electrode is formed by depositing onto a substrate the products of thermal decomposition of cesium carbonate. This layer, which is easily formed and renewed, is characterized by a very low value of work function of about 1.05 electron volts, which facilitates formation of large quantities of negative ions. Properties of the surface layer, particularly the low value of work function, are reproducible and relatively insensitive to variations in the thickness of the layer and to the substrate material selected for the electrode.Type: GrantFiled: November 29, 1979Date of Patent: November 3, 1981Assignee: Thermo Electron CorporationInventor: Fred N. Huffman
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Patent number: 4293527Abstract: A method and system for continuously extracting metals from sea water by deploying adsorber sheets in a suitable current of sea water, recovering the adsorber sheets after they become loaded with metal and eluting the metal from the recovered sheets. The system involves the use of hollow, perforated bobbins on which the sheets are rolled as they are recovered and through which elutant is introduced.Type: GrantFiled: May 14, 1980Date of Patent: October 6, 1981Assignee: Thermo Electron CorporationInventors: Dean T. Morgan, Chryssostomos Chryssostomidis, George J. LaRue
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Patent number: 4288062Abstract: A system is described for precise monitoring and control of the carbon content of the atmosphere of a furnace such as a carburizer used in the heat-processing of steel parts. The disclosed apparatus includes a sampling system for withdrawing a gas sample from the atmosphere within a furnace and an analyzer for producing signals indicative of the partial pressures of at least two gaseous components such as carbon dioxide and carbon monoxide. The analyzer preferably utilizes selective absorption of narrow-band infrared radiation signals in determining these signals. A processor combines the signals indicative of partial pressures with parameters obtained from measurements of furnace temperature, and calculates carbon potential of the furnace atmosphere. The processor output is coupled with an atmosphere control which maintains desired levels of carbon potential in the atmosphere of the furnace by, for example, regulating the flow of an enriching gas to the furnace.Type: GrantFiled: August 9, 1979Date of Patent: September 8, 1981Assignee: HolcroftInventors: Bhupendra K. Gupta, Paul K. Shefsiek, Freeman W. Fraim
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Patent number: 4277259Abstract: An air-sampling cartridge is disclosed for collecting organic compounds such as N-nitrosamines from air for analysis. The cartridge is formed by joining two injection-molded plastic parts: a generally cylindrical cartridge body into which air-pervious packings of granular adsorbent materials may be loaded, and a cartridge cap which is ultrasonically welded to the body to partially close one end of the cartridge. The cap and body define a cartridge with an inlet and outlet shaped to facilitate connection of the cartridge to a pump used to draw air samples through the cartridge, to allow connection of two or more cartridges in series, and to accommodate standard-sized syringes used in removing trapped compounds from the cartridge for analysis.The cartridge also includes a retention clip integrally molded with the cartridge body and cap for permitting the cartridge to be attached to the clothing of a person during air-sampling.Type: GrantFiled: February 11, 1980Date of Patent: July 7, 1981Assignee: Thermo Electron CorporationInventors: David P. Rounbehler, Robert S. Potts