Patents by Inventor Charles Brian Blake

Charles Brian Blake 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: 20040073072
    Abstract: Prior to carrying out a gaseous phase chemical reaction, a liquid phase organic compound which is prone to degrade is vaporised at elevated pressures with the aid of a second compound. In one embodiment of the invention, vaporisation is effected by co-vaporising a mixture of the two compounds in a vaporiser. In another embodiment, the first compound is injected into a hot gaseous stream and undergoes atomisation into droplets which then vaporise within the gaseous stream. The second compound is used to assist the atomisation process and/or to sweep atomised droplets of the first compound away from hot surfaces where the first compound would otherwise tend to undergo degradation if the droplets are allowed to reside in contact with such surfaces.
    Type: Application
    Filed: July 18, 2003
    Publication date: April 15, 2004
    Inventors: John David Scott, Charles Brian Blake, Paul Nicholas Ewing, Jeremy Charles Bauser Hunns, Steven Toplis, Andrew Neil Irwin, Mark Spruce
  • Patent number: 6660130
    Abstract: Prior to carrying out a gaseous phase chemical reaction, a liquid phase organic compound which is prone to degrade is vaporized at elevated pressures with the aid of a second compound which together with the organic compound produces a mixture having a boiling point less than that of the organic compound. In one embodiment of the invention, vaporization is effected by co-vaporizing a mixture of the two compounds in a vaporiser. In another embodiment, the first compound is injected into a hot gaseous stream and undergoes atomization into droplets which then vaporize within the gaseous stream. The second compound is used to assist the atomization process and/or to sweep atomized droplets of the first compound away from hot surfaces where the first compound would otherwise tend to undergo degradation if the droplets are allowed to reside in contact with such surfaces.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: April 11, 2001
    Date of Patent: December 9, 2003
    Assignee: Ineos Fluor Holdings Limited
    Inventors: John David Scott, Charles Brian Blake, Paul Nicholas Ewing, Jeremy Charles Bauser Hunns, Steven Toplis, Andrew Neil Irwin, Mark Spruce
  • Patent number: 6288292
    Abstract: Prior to carrying out a gaseous phase chemical reaction, a liquid phase organic compound which is prone to degrade is vaporised at elevated pressures with the aid of a second compound. In one embodiment of the invention vaporisation is effected by co-vaporising a mixture of the two compounds in a vaporiser. In another embodiment, the first compound is injected into a hot gaseous stream and undergoes atomisation into droplets which then vaporise within the gaseous stream. The second compound is used to assist the atomisation process and/or to sweep atomised droplets of the first compound away from hot surfaces where the first compound would otherwise tend to undergo degradation if the droplets are allowed to reside in contact with such surfaces.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: November 29, 1999
    Date of Patent: September 11, 2001
    Assignee: Imperial Chemical Industries, PLC
    Inventors: John David Scott, Charles Brian Blake, Paul Nicholas Ewing, Jeremy Charles Bauser Hunns
  • Publication number: 20010012910
    Abstract: Prior to carrying out a gaseous phase chemical reaction, a liquid phase organic compound which is prone to degrade is vaporized at elevated pressures with the aid of a second compound. In one embodiment of the invention, vaporization is effected by co-vaporizing a mixture of the two compounds in a vaporizer. In another embodiment, the first compound is injected into a hot gaseous stream and undergoes atomization into droplets which then vaporize within the gaseous stream. The second compound is used to assist the atomization process and/or to sweep atomized droplets of the first compound away from hot surfaces where the first compound would otherwise tend to undergo degradation if the droplets are allowed to reside in contact with such surfaces.
    Type: Application
    Filed: April 11, 2001
    Publication date: August 9, 2001
    Inventors: John David Scott, Charles Brian Blake, Paul Nicholas Ewing, Jeremy Charles Bauser Hunns, Steven Toplis, Andrew Neil Irwin, Mark Spruce
  • Patent number: 6103944
    Abstract: Water present in a hot gaseous product stream from a reactor system A.B (FIG. 1) containing hydrogen fluoride is separated from the stream in order to eliminate a potentially corrosive combination of water and HF. The water is removed by contacting the gaseous product stream with liquid HF in a distillation column so as to obtain a bottoms product containing liquid HF and water and a top product containing dry HF and the product to be recovered. The invention encompasses the separation process, a vessel for carrying out the process (FIGS. 2 to 4), a control system for the liquid HF supply to the distillation column (FIGS. 5 and 6) and a recovery system for recovering HF employed during operation of the reactor system in different regimes employing HF as a fluorination agent, as a diluent during catalyst regeneration and/or catalyst prefluorination (FIG. 7).
    Type: Grant
    Filed: May 2, 1994
    Date of Patent: August 15, 2000
    Assignee: Imperial Chemical Industries PLC
    Inventors: Charles Brian Blake, James Malcolm Forsyth, Ann San Liow, Stephen John Adams, Ralph Jones Doy, Rowland John Porter Brierley, Jane Andrea Eileen Roberts, Brian Schofield, Neil David Shilling
  • Patent number: 6034288
    Abstract: Prior to carrying out a gaseous phase chemical reaction, a liquid phase organic compound which is prone to degrade is vaporised at elevated pressures with the aid of a second compound. In one embodiment of the invention, vaporisation is effected by co-vaporising a mixture of the two compounds in a vaporiser. In another embodiment, the first compound is injected into a hot gaseous stream and undergoes atomisation into droplets which then vaporise within the gaseous stream. The second compound is used to assist the atomisation process and/or to sweep atomised droplets of the first compound away from hot surfaces where the first compound would otherwise tend to undergo degradation if the droplets are allowed to reside in contact with such surfaces.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: September 25, 1995
    Date of Patent: March 7, 2000
    Assignee: Imperial Chemical Industries PLC
    Inventors: John David Scott, Charles Brian Blake, Paul Nicholas Ewing