Patents by Inventor Duncan W. McBranch
Duncan W. McBranch 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).
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Patent number: 7125578Abstract: A method using polyelectrolyte self-assembly for preparing multi-layered organic molecular materials having individual layers which exhibit ultrafast electron and/or energy transfer in a controlled direction occurring over the entire structure. Using a high molecular weight, water-soluble, anionic form of poly-phenylene vinylene, self-assembled films can be formed which show high photoluminescence quantum efficiency (QE). The highest emission QE is achieved using poly(propylene-imine) (PPI) dendrimers as cationic binders. Self-quenching of the luminescence is observed as the solid polymer film thickness is increased and can be reversed by inserting additional spacer layers of transparent polyelectrolytes between each active conjugated layer, such that the QE grows with thickness. A red shift of the luminescence is also observed as additional PPV layers are added. This effect persists as self-quenching is eliminated. Charge transfer superlattices can be formed by additionally incorporating C60 acceptor layers.Type: GrantFiled: April 23, 1999Date of Patent: October 24, 2006Assignee: Los Alamos National Security, LLCInventor: Duncan W. McBranch
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Patent number: 6979543Abstract: A sensor is provided including a polymer capable of having an alterable measurable property from the group of luminescence and electrical conductivity, the polymer having an intermediate combination of a recognition element, a tethering element and a property-altering element bound thereto and capable of altering the measurable property, the intermediate combination adapted for subsequent separation from the polymer upon exposure to an agent having an affinity for binding to the recognition element whereupon the separation of the intermediate combination from the polymer results in a detectable change in the alterable measurable property, and, detecting said detectable change in the alterable measurable property.Type: GrantFiled: April 10, 2003Date of Patent: December 27, 2005Assignee: The Regents of the University of CaliforniaInventors: Liaohai Chen, Duncan W. McBranch, Hsing-Lin Wang, David G. Whitten
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Publication number: 20040241768Abstract: A chemical composition including a moiety comprising a quencher (Q), a tethering element (T), and a ligand (L) that associates with and quenches a fluorescent polymer is disclosed. When an analyte sample is introduced, the ligand (L) binds to a target biological agent if it is present, thereby causing the QTL molecule to separate from the fluorescent polymer resulting in an increase in detected fluorescence. The same chemistry is advantageously employed in a competitive assay. An electric field can also be applied to separate the QTL molecule from the fluorescent polymer. A method for detecting targets for these methods are also disclosed.Type: ApplicationFiled: March 29, 2004Publication date: December 2, 2004Inventors: David G. Whitten, Duncan W. McBranch, Robert Jones, Troy S. Bergstedt
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Patent number: 6761999Abstract: Charge-transfer materials are demonstrated to be useful for generating femtosecond holographic gratings. Using semiconducting polymers sensitized with varying concentrations of C60, absorption holographic gratings with diffraction efficiencies of 1.6% were recorded with individual ultrafast laser pulses; the diffraction efficiency and time decay of the gratings were measured using nondegenerate four-wave mixing. High quantum efficiency for electron transfer reduces the effects of early recombination which otherwise limits the density of excitations in pure polymers, and the metastability of the charge transfer enables tuning of the decay dynamics by controlling the concentration of acceptors in the mixture.Type: GrantFiled: October 4, 2001Date of Patent: July 13, 2004Assignee: The Regents of the University of CaliforniaInventors: Eric S. Maniloff, Duncan W. McBranch, Alan J. Heeger, Dan V. Vacar
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Patent number: 6743640Abstract: A chemical composition including a moiety comprising a quencher (Q), a tethering element (T), and a ligand (L) that associates with and quenches a fluorescent polymer is disclosed. When an analyte sample is introduced, the ligand (L) binds to a target biological agent if it is present, thereby causing the QTL molecule to separate from the fluorescent polymer resulting in an increase in detected fluorescence. The same chemistry is advantageously employed in a competitive assay. An electric field can also be applied to separate the QTL molecule from the fluorescent polymer. A method for detecting targets for these methods are also disclosed.Type: GrantFiled: May 8, 2001Date of Patent: June 1, 2004Assignee: QTL Biosystems LLCInventors: David G. Whitten, Duncan W. McBranch, Robert Jones, Troy S. Bergstedt
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Publication number: 20040023272Abstract: A sensor is provided including a polymer capable of having an alterable measurable property from the group of luminescence and electrical conductivity, the polymer having an intermediate combination of a recognition element, a tethering element and a property-altering element bound thereto and capable of altering the measurable property, the intermediate combination adapted for subsequent separation from the polymer upon exposure to an agent having an affinity for binding to the recognition element whereupon the separation of the intermediate combination from the polymer results in a detectable change in the alterable measurable property, and, a means of detecting said detectable change in the alterable measurable property.Type: ApplicationFiled: April 10, 2003Publication date: February 5, 2004Inventors: Liaohai Chen, Duncan W. McBranch, Hsing-Lin Wang, David G. Whitten
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Patent number: 6589731Abstract: A sensor element is provided including a polymer exhibiting a measurable property from the group of luminescence and electrical conductivity, the polymer being complexed with a unit including a recognition element, a tethering element and a property-altering element bound thereto so as to alter the measurable property, the unit being susceptible of subsequent separation from the polymer upon exposure to an agent having an affinity for binding to the recognition element whereupon the separation of the unit from the polymer results in a detectable change in the measurable property.Type: GrantFiled: May 4, 2000Date of Patent: July 8, 2003Assignee: The Regents of the University of CaliforniaInventors: Liaohai Chen, Duncan W. McBranch, Hsing-Lin Wang, David G. Whitten
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Patent number: 6522447Abstract: Optical limiting device and method of preparation thereof. The optical limiting device includes a transparent substrate and at least one homogeneous layer of an RSA material in polyvinylbutyral attached to the substrate. The device may be produced by preparing a solution of an RSA material, preferably a metallophthalocyanine complex, and a solution of polyvinylbutyral, and then mixing the two solutions together to remove air bubbles. The resulting solution is layered onto the substrate and the solvent is evaporated. The method can be used to produce a dual tandem optical limiting device.Type: GrantFiled: May 31, 2001Date of Patent: February 18, 2003Assignee: The Regents of the University of CaliforniaInventors: Hsing-Lin Wang, Su Xu, Duncan W. McBranch
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Publication number: 20020182388Abstract: Optical limiting device and method of preparation thereof. The optical limiting device includes a transparent substrate and at least one homogeneous layer of an RSA material in polyvinylbutyral attached to the substrate. The device may be produced by preparing a solution of an RSA material, preferably a metallophthalocyanine complex, and a solution of polyvinylbutyral, and then mixing the two solutions together to remove air bubbles. The resulting solution is layered onto the substrate and the solvent is evaporated. The method can be used to produce a dual tandem optical limiting device.Type: ApplicationFiled: May 31, 2001Publication date: December 5, 2002Inventors: Hsing-Lin Wang, Su Xu, Duncan W. McBranch
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Publication number: 20020177136Abstract: A chemical moiety including a polymer (P), a first tethering element (T), a ligand (L) which is a specific sequence of PNA, a second tethering element (T′) and a quencher (Q) is disclosed. In the absence of a complement to the PNA sequence, the PNA is in a tightly coiled configuration, thereby quenching the polymer due to the close proximity of the quencher to the polymer. When a receptor is added that recognizes the PNA sequence, a hybridization of the PNA sequence separates the polymer and the quencher, resulting in an increase of detected fluorescence. The same chemistry is advantageously employed in a competitive assay. A method for detecting nucleic acids in a target sample using the PTLT′Q molecule is also disclosed.Type: ApplicationFiled: August 23, 2001Publication date: November 28, 2002Inventors: Duncan W. McBranch, David G. Whitten, Michael Egholm
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Publication number: 20020114998Abstract: Charge-transfer materials are demonstrated to be useful for generating femtosecond holographic gratings. Using semiconducting polymers sensitized with varying concentrations of C60, absorption holographic gratings with diffraction efficiencies of 1.6% were recorded with individual ultrafast laser pulses; the diffraction efficiency and time decay of the gratings were measured using nondegenerate four-wave mixing. High quantum efficiency for electron transfer reduces the effects of early recombination which otherwise limits the density of excitations in pure polymers, and the metastability of the charge transfer enables tuning of the decay dynamics by controlling the concentration of acceptors in the mixture.Type: ApplicationFiled: October 4, 2001Publication date: August 22, 2002Inventors: Eric S. Maniloff, Duncan W. McBranch, Alan J. Heeger, Dan V. Vacar
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Publication number: 20020051985Abstract: A chemical composition including a moiety comprising a quencher (Q), a tethering element (T), and a ligand (L) that associates with and quenches a fluorescent polymer is disclosed. When an analyte sample is introduced, the ligand (L) binds to a target biological agent if it is present, thereby causing the QTL molecule to separate from the fluorescent polymer resulting in an increase in detected fluorescence. The same chemistry is advantageously employed in a competitive assay. An electric field can also be applied to separate the QTL molecule from the fluorescent polymer. A method for detecting targets for these methods are also disclosed.Type: ApplicationFiled: May 8, 2001Publication date: May 2, 2002Inventors: David G. Whitten, Duncan W. McBranch, Robert Jones, Troy S. Bergstedt
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Patent number: 6191861Abstract: A method and apparatus for femtosecond transient absorption comprising phase-sensitive detection, spectral scanning and simultaneous controlling of a translation stage to obtain TA spectra information having at least a sensitivity two orders of magnitude higher than that for single-shot methods, with direct, simultaneous compensation for chirp as the data is acquired. The present invention includes a amplified delay translation stage which generates a splittable frequency-doubled laser signal at a predetermined frequency f, a controllable means for synchronously modulating one of the laser signals at a repetition rate of f/2, applying the laser signals to a material to be sample, and acquiring data from the excited sample while simultaneously controlling the controllable means for synchronously modulating.Type: GrantFiled: February 13, 1999Date of Patent: February 20, 2001Inventors: Duncan W. McBranch, Victor I. Klimov
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Patent number: 5741442Abstract: Optical limiting materials. Methanofullerenes, fulleroids and/or other fullerenes chemically altered for enhanced solubility, in liquid solution, and in solid blends with transparent glass (SiO.sub.2) gels or polymers, or semiconducting (conjugated) polymers, are shown to be useful as optical limiters (optical surge protectors). The nonlinear absorption is tunable such that the energy transmitted through such blends saturates at high input energy per pulse over a wide range of wavelengths from 400-1100 nm by selecting the host material for its absorption wavelength and ability to transfer the absorbed energy into the optical limiting composition dissolved therein. This phenomenon should be generalizable to other compositions than substituted fullerenes.Type: GrantFiled: July 11, 1995Date of Patent: April 21, 1998Assignee: The Regents of the University of CaliforniaInventors: Duncan W. McBranch, Benjamin R. Mattes, Aaron C. Koskelo, Alan J. Heeger, Jeanne M. Robinson, Laura B. Smilowitz, Victor I. Klimov, Myoungsik Cha, N. Serdar Sariciftci, Jan C. Hummelen
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Patent number: 5420081Abstract: Synthesis of fullerene/glass composites. A direct method for preparing solid solutions of C.sub.60 in silicon dioxide (SiO.sub.2) glass matrices by means of sol-gel chemistry is described. In order to produce highly concentrated fullerene-sol-gel-composites it is necessary to increase the solubility of these "guests" in a delivery solvent which is compatible with the starter sol (receiving solvent). Sonication results in aggregate disruption by treatment with high frequency sound waves, thereby accelerating the rate of hydrolysis of the alkoxide precursor, and the solution process for the C.sub.60. Depending upon the preparative procedure, C.sub.60 dispersed within the glass matrix as microcrystalline domains, or dispersed as true molecular solutions of C.sub.60 in a solid glass matrix, is generated by the present method.Type: GrantFiled: March 31, 1994Date of Patent: May 30, 1995Assignee: The Regents of the University of California Office of Technology TransferInventors: Benjamin R. Mattes, Duncan W. McBranch, Jeanne M. Robinson, Aaron C. Koskelo, Steven P. Love