Patents by Inventor Craig M. Storms

Craig M. Storms 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: 7169616
    Abstract: An apparatus and method for delivering repetitive, precision, low volume liquid dispensing from a dispensing orifice of a non-contact liquid dispensing apparatus. An elongated communication passageway of the dispensing apparatus is defined by interior walls having one end in fluid communication with a system fluid reservoir and an opposite end terminating at the dispensing orifice. A system fluid is placed in the communication passageway extending substantially continuously from the system fluid reservoir to the dispensing orifice. A relatively small volume of gaseous fluid is aspirated through the dispensing orifice, and into the communication passageway in a manner such that the gaseous fluid extends substantially continuously across the transverse cross-sectional dimension of the communication passageway.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: January 27, 2003
    Date of Patent: January 30, 2007
    Assignee: Innovadyne Technologies, Inc.
    Inventors: James E. Johnson, Neil R. Picha, Craig M. Storms, David A. Martin
  • Patent number: 6983636
    Abstract: A universal calibration apparatus and method to estimate the dispense output from a low volume, non-contact, liquid dispensing systems that may be applied for every hardware configuration (e.g., tube length, orifice diameter, tip design, etc), reagent solution property and environmental condition. This same calibration technique is applied to calibrate or tune these non-contact liquid dispensing systems to dispense desired volumes (in the range of about 0.050 ?L to 50 ?L), irrespective of the hardware configuration or the solution properties. That is, the calibration technique is not dependent on any variables, but the result (the actual dispense volume) is dependant on the variable mentioned. By actuating selected pulse widths, and measuring the resulting volume, a Calibration Profile can be generated correlating the liquid volume dispensed from the orifice to the respective pulse width of the dispensing valve thereof through calibration points.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: January 27, 2003
    Date of Patent: January 10, 2006
    Assignee: Innovadyne Technologies, Inc.
    Inventors: James E. Johnson, Neil R. Picha, Craig M. Storms, David A. Martin
  • Publication number: 20030167822
    Abstract: A universal calibration apparatus and method to estimate the dispense output from a low volume, non-contact, liquid dispensing systems that may be applied for every hardware configuration (e.g., tube length, orifice diameter, tip design, etc), reagent solution property and environmental condition. This same calibration technique is applied to calibrate or tune these non-contact liquid dispensing systems to dispense desired volumes (in the range of about 0.050 &mgr;L to 50 &mgr;L), irrespective of the hardware configuration or the solution properties. That is, the calibration technique is not dependent on any variables, but the result (the actual dispense volume) is dependant on the variable mentioned. By actuating selected pulse widths, and measuring the resulting volume, a Calibration Profile can be generated correlating the liquid volume dispensed from the orifice to the respective pulse width of the dispensing valve thereof through calibration points..
    Type: Application
    Filed: January 27, 2003
    Publication date: September 11, 2003
    Applicant: INNOVADYNE TECHNOLOGIES, INC.
    Inventors: James E. Johnson, Neil R. Picha, Craig M. Storms, David A. Martin
  • Publication number: 20030170903
    Abstract: An apparatus and method for delivering repetitive, precision, low volume liquid dispensing from a dispensing orifice of a non-contact liquid dispensing apparatus. An elongated communication passageway of the dispensing apparatus is defined by interior walls having one end in fluid communication with a system fluid reservoir and an opposite end terminating at the dispensing orifice. A system fluid is placed in the communication passageway extending substantially continuously from the system fluid reservoir to the dispensing orifice. A relatively small volume of gaseous fluid is aspirated through the dispensing orifice, and into the communication passageway in a manner such that the gaseous fluid extends substantially continuously across the transverse cross-sectional dimension of the communication passageway.
    Type: Application
    Filed: January 27, 2003
    Publication date: September 11, 2003
    Applicant: INNOVADYNE TECHNOLOGIES, INC.
    Inventors: James E. Johnson, Neil R. Picha, Craig M. Storms, David A. Martin