Patents by Inventor Alexander Ach

Alexander Ach 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: 5376708
    Abstract: A biodegradable plastic material based on cellulose esters and possibly biodegradable carboxylic acid esters, glycol esters or glycol ethers as softener, composed of from about 50 to about 90 weight percent cellulose ester, from about 5 to about 40 weight percent softener, from about 5 to about 30 weight percent polyester and from about 0.5 to about 5 weight percent AQ-nylon. The biodegradable plastic material may also contain organic acids and/or acid esters and/or ethers different from the softener, and other additives, such as flame inhibitors, and is distinguished by excellent biodegradability, injection molding and blow molding characteristics. Also disclosed are articles made of the material of the invention and methods of making such articles. It is preferably molded into thin sheets and transparent plastic articles, preferably into enclosures/containers for oil lamps, eternal flame oil candles, composition lights, other cemetery light designs, votive lights and thin sheets.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: July 2, 1992
    Date of Patent: December 27, 1994
    Assignee: Battelle Institute e.V.
    Inventors: Bernd Best, Klaus Wollmann, Alexander Ach
  • Patent number: 5312933
    Abstract: The present invention relates to a process of producing symmetrically structured difatty acid diamines by reacting mixtures of fatty acids or their esters with diamines, isolating the symmetrical difatty acid diamides from the reaction mixture by making use of their different solubilities and concentrating them by recrystallisation if necessary. The invention also provides for a process of isolating a fatty acid from a mixture of fatty acids wherein the difatty acid diamides produced in the process of the invention are saponified to yield the corresponding free fatty acid.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: February 28, 1991
    Date of Patent: May 17, 1994
    Assignee: Battelle-Institut e.V.
    Inventors: Rainer Frische, Jurgen Volkheimer, Klaus Wollmann, Herrmann Schomann, Judith Schneider, Alexander Ach, Renate Gross-Lannert, Bernd Best
  • Patent number: 5302670
    Abstract: The present invention relates to plastics that can be obtained by reacting unsaturated and/or hydroxyl-group-containing fatty acids or their esters or mixtures of various such fatty acids and esters with bifunctional ester-forming and/or amide-forming compounds and, if necessary, subsequently converting ethylenic double bonds, to give difatty acid diamides, difatty acid diesters, difatty acid amide esters, monofatty acid amide amines or monofatty acid amide alcohols as monomer components which contain at least two reactive groups suited for linkage to give polymers, in particular ethylenic double bonds, hydroxyl groups, epoxy groups or amino groups, and by linking the said compounds in the known way via a second group of bifunctional compounds that are capable of reacting with these free reactive groups to give the desired plastics.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: February 28, 1991
    Date of Patent: April 12, 1994
    Assignee: Battelle-Institut e.V.
    Inventors: Rainer Frische, Jurgen Volkheimer, Klaus Wollmann, Herrmann Schomann, Judith Schneider, Alexander Ach, Renate Gross-Lannert, Bernd Best
  • Patent number: 5118722
    Abstract: A method of producing elastic foam having a base of polyurethane, in particular for use in the field of automobiles for sound damping. Allows production of foam parts directly in a desired shape in as few operations as possible. The foam is formed from a mixture of at least one polyurethane precondensate, at least on melamine precondensate and further additives for the foaming.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: November 27, 1989
    Date of Patent: June 2, 1992
    Assignee: Illbruck GmbH
    Inventors: Klaus Wollmann, Alexander Ach, Werner Frank