Patents by Inventor Aron Kuppermann

Aron Kuppermann 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: 4314156
    Abstract: An automated mass spectrometer analysis system is disclosed, in which samples are automatically processed in a sample processor and converted into volatilizable samples, or their characteristic volatilizable derivatives. Each volatilizable sample is sequentially volatilized and analyzed in a double focusing mass spectrometer, whose output is in the form of separate ion beams all of which are simultaneously focused in a focal plane. Each ion beam is indicative of a different sample component or different fragments of one or more sample components and the beam intensity is related to the relative abundance of the sample component. The system includes an electro-optical ion detector which automatically and simultaneously converts the ion beams, first into electron beams which in turn produce a related image which is transferred to the target of a vilicon unit.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 6, 1979
    Date of Patent: February 2, 1982
    Assignee: California Institute of Technology
    Inventors: Aron Kuppermann, William J. Dreyer, Charles E. Giffin, Heinz G. Boettger
  • Patent number: 4084090
    Abstract: An automated mass spectrometer analysis system is disclosed, in which samples are automatically processed in a sample processor and converted into volatilizable samples, or their characteristic volatilizable derivatives. Each volatizable sample is sequentially volatilized and analyzed in a double focusing mass spectrometer, whose output is in the form of separate ion beams all of which are simultaneously focused in a focal plane. Each ion beam is indicative of a different sample component or different fragments of one or more sample components and the beam intensity is related to the relative abundance of the sample component. The system includes an electro-optical ion detector which automatically and simultaneously converts the ion beams, first into electron beams which in turn produce a related image which is transferred to the target of a vidicon unit.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: June 16, 1975
    Date of Patent: April 11, 1978
    Assignee: California Institute of Technology
    Inventors: Heinz G. Boettger, Charles E. Giffin, William J. Dreyer, Aron Kuppermann