Patents by Inventor Harald Striegler

Harald Striegler 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: 20070295711
    Abstract: The cook top includes a colorless transparent glass ceramic plate, which is provided with an opaque coating extending over its underside, except that in at least one window area a window coating is provided on the underside of the glass ceramic plate area instead of the opaque coating. In order to optimize colored displays arranged under the at least one window area and to facilitate the use of capacitive touch sensors, the window coating is a burned-in noble metal preparation with an electrical surface resistance of 1 M?/? and in the at least one window area the glass ceramic plate coated with the window coating has a transmission in a range from 1.0 to 21.0% and a light scattering in a range of from 0.0 to 1.0% for visible light with wavelengths of from 400 nm to 750 nm.
    Type: Application
    Filed: June 14, 2007
    Publication date: December 27, 2007
    Inventors: Harald Striegler, Dietmar Wennemann, Annette Lukas
  • Publication number: 20070003769
    Abstract: The cook top has a transparent, colorless glass ceramic or glass panel providing a cooking surface, which is made from pre-stressed special glass, and an IR-permeable undercoat on the underside of the panel, which is a heat-resistant inorganic enamel paint. In order to provide a heat-resistant cook top, through which the internal parts of the cooking unit cannot be observed, without reducing the strength of the cook top, the inorganic enamel paint includes 70 to 99, preferably 80 to 95, percent by weight of inorganic pigment and from 1 to 30, preferably 5 to 20, percent by weight of glass flux. The glass flux preferably is a borosilicate glass with a thermal expansion coefficient less than or equal to 4*10?6 K?1. The coating may be applied by screen printing techniques.
    Type: Application
    Filed: May 15, 2006
    Publication date: January 4, 2007
    Inventor: Harald Striegler
  • Patent number: 7105232
    Abstract: The cook top has a transparent, colorless glass ceramic or glass panel providing a cooking surface, which is made from pre-stressed special glass, and an IR-permeable undercoat on the underside of the panel, which is a heat-resistant inorganic enamel paint. In order to provide a heat-resistant cook top, through which the internal parts of the cooking unit cannot be observed, without reducing the strength of the cook top, the inorganic enamel paint includes 70 to 99, preferably 80 to 95, percent by weight of inorganic pigment and from 1 to 30, preferably 5 to 20, percent by weight of glass flux. The glass flux preferably is a borosilicate glass with a thermal expansion coefficient less than or equal to 4*10?6 K?1. The coating may be applied by screen printing techniques.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: September 17, 2003
    Date of Patent: September 12, 2006
    Assignee: Schott AG
    Inventor: Harald Striegler
  • Publication number: 20050129959
    Abstract: A transparent, colorless glass or glass-ceramic panel has a visually dense, high-temperature-stable coating having an organic/inorganic network structure containing filling material particles and a color-imparting pigment. The mechanically stable, visually dense coating has no melt-reaction zone at the surface of the panel, which is coated with the coating, so that it does not impair the panel strength. The inorganic network structure can be made from a SiO2-based sol. The coating is made by introducing the color-imparting pigment and the filling material particles into a reactive organic/inorganic network structure; applying the resulting organic/inorganic network structure containing the pigment and the filling material particles to the panel to coat the panel and then burning-in the organic/inorganic network structure with the pigment and the filling material particles under thermal conditions to form the coating with no melt-reaction zone.
    Type: Application
    Filed: November 19, 2004
    Publication date: June 16, 2005
    Inventors: Gabriele Roemer-Scheuermann, Andrea Anton, Harald Striegler, Thomas Kraus, Gerhard Weber, Lutz Klippe, Veit Luther, Petra Grewer
  • Publication number: 20040091718
    Abstract: The cook top has a transparent, colorless glass ceramic or glass panel providing a cooking surface, which is made from pre-stressed special glass, and an IR-permeable undercoat on the underside of the panel, which is a heat-resistant inorganic enamel paint. In order to provide a heat-resistant cook top, through which the internal parts of the cooking unit cannot be observed, without reducing the strength of the cook top, the inorganic enamel paint includes 70 to 99, preferably 80 to 95, percent by weight of inorganic pigment and from 1 to 30, preferably 5 to 20, percent by weight of glass flux. The glass flux preferably is a borosilicate glass with a thermal expansion coefficient less than or equal to 4*10−6 K−1. The coating may be applied by screen printing techniques.
    Type: Application
    Filed: September 17, 2003
    Publication date: May 13, 2004
    Inventor: Harald Striegler