Patents by Inventor Bruce R. Weber

Bruce R. Weber 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).

  • Publication number: 20080121801
    Abstract: In an analytical instrument having a radiation detector, such as an electron microscope with an X-ray detector, a thermoelectric element (such as one or more Peltier junctions) is driven by a cooling power supply to cool the detector and thereby decrease measurement noise. Oil condensates and ice can then form on the detector owing to residual water vapor and vacuum pump oil in the analysis chamber, and these contaminants can interfere with measurement accuracy. To assist in reducing this problem, the thermoelectric element can be powered in the reverse of its cooling mode, thereby heating the detector and evaporating the contaminants. After the detector is cleared of contaminants, it may again be cooled and measurements may resume. Preferably, the thermoelectric element is heated by a power supply separate from the one that provides the cooling power, though it can also be possible to utilize a single power supply to provide both heating and cooling modes.
    Type: Application
    Filed: May 12, 2006
    Publication date: May 29, 2008
    Inventors: James V. Howard, Tom Jacobs, Mark E. Misenheimer, David B. Rohde, Bruce R. Weber
  • Patent number: 7378664
    Abstract: In an analytical instrument having a radiation detector, such as an electron microscope with an X-ray detector, a thermoelectric element (such as one or more Peltier junctions) is driven by a cooling power supply to cool the detector and thereby decrease measurement noise. Oil condensates and ice can then form on the detector owing to residual water vapor and vacuum pump oil in the analysis chamber, and these contaminants can interfere with measurement accuracy. To assist in reducing this problem, the thermoelectric element can be powered in the reverse of its cooling mode, thereby heating the detector and evaporating the contaminants. After the detector is cleared of contaminants, it may again be cooled and measurements may resume. Preferably, the thermoelectric element is heated by a power supply separate from the one that provides the cooling power, though it can also be possible to utilize a single power supply to provide both heating and cooling modes.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: May 12, 2006
    Date of Patent: May 27, 2008
    Assignee: Thermo Electron Scientific Instruments LLC
    Inventors: James V. Howard, Tom Jacobs, Mark E. Misenheimer, David B. Rohde, Bruce R. Weber
  • Patent number: D297025
    Type: Grant
    Filed: November 25, 1985
    Date of Patent: August 2, 1988
    Inventors: Bruce R. Weber, Mary M. Weber