Patents by Inventor James A. Sawada

James A. Sawada 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: 11474064
    Abstract: Sensors and methods for detecting combustible gases in a gas mixture are disclosed based on combustion catalyst compositions comprising an amount of a precious metal supported on an ion-exchangeable alkali metal titanate substrate. The sensors and methods are particularly useful for measuring the concentration of combustible gases in low temperature and high humidity conditions. Advantageously, certain embodiments can selectively measure the concentration of select species (e.g. ethylene).
    Type: Grant
    Filed: February 18, 2019
    Date of Patent: October 18, 2022
    Inventor: James Sawada
  • Patent number: 11065579
    Abstract: Methods are disclosed for achieving the catalytic combustion of a gaseous species in low temperature humid environments. The methods comprise the steps of obtaining a combustion catalyst composition comprising an amount of a precious metal supported on an ion-exchangeable alkali metal titanate substrate, and then exposing the species to the combustion catalyst composition in the presence of an oxygen containing gas and water vapour at a catalysis temperature below 200° C. and at a relative humidity above 0.5%. A novel desiccant-coupled catalytic combustion process and system are also disclosed.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: September 1, 2017
    Date of Patent: July 20, 2021
    Inventor: James Sawada
  • Publication number: 20200400601
    Abstract: Sensors and methods for detecting combustible gases in a gas mixture are disclosed based on combustion catalyst compositions comprising an amount of a precious metal supported on an ion-exchangeable alkali metal titanate substrate. The sensors and methods are particularly useful for measuring the concentration of combustible gases in low temperature and high humidity conditions. Advantageously, certain embodiments can selectively measure the concentration of select species (e.g. ethylene).
    Type: Application
    Filed: February 18, 2019
    Publication date: December 24, 2020
    Inventor: James SAWADA
  • Publication number: 20200179874
    Abstract: Methods are disclosed for achieving the catalytic combustion of a gaseous species in low temperature humid environments. The methods comprise the steps of obtaining a combustion catalyst composition comprising an amount of a precious metal supported on an ion-exchangeable alkali metal titanate substrate, and then exposing the species to the combustion catalyst composition in the presence of an oxygen containing gas and water vapour at a catalysis temperature below 200° C. and at a relative humidity above 0.5%. A novel desiccant-coupled catalytic combustion process and system are also disclosed.
    Type: Application
    Filed: September 1, 2017
    Publication date: June 11, 2020
    Inventor: James SAWADA
  • Patent number: 8545608
    Abstract: Embodiments of crystalline, titanium silicate molecular sieves are described having a formula representing mole ratios of oxides of nM1O:TiO2:ySiO2:zH2O:wX where M1 refers to a metal cation or mixture of metal cations; n is from about 1 to about 2; y is from about 1 to about 10; z is from 0 to about 100; X is a halide anion other than fluorine, or combination of halide anions that excludes fluorine; and w is greater than 0. The pore size of the sieves can be adjusted by ion exchanging M1 cations with a suitable amount of another species. Embodiments of the invention are useful for various adsorptive fluid separation processes, including pressure swing adsorption processes. For example, disclosed embodiments are useful for separating methane from air.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: December 15, 2011
    Date of Patent: October 1, 2013
    Assignee: The Governors of the University of Alberta
    Inventors: James A. Sawada, Edward J. Rode, Steven M. Kuznicki, Christopher Chih Itao Lin
  • Publication number: 20130014644
    Abstract: Embodiments of crystalline, titanium silicate molecular sieves are described having a formula representing mole ratios of oxides of nM1O:TiO2:ySiO2:zH2O:wX where M1 refers to a metal cation or mixture of metal cations; n is from about 1 to about 2; y is from about 1 to about 10; z is from 0 to about 100; X is a halide anion other than fluorine, or combination of halide anions that excludes fluorine; and w is greater than 0. The pore size of the sieves can be adjusted by ion exchanging M1 cations with a suitable amount of another species. Embodiments of the invention are useful for various adsorptive fluid separation processes, including pressure swing adsorption processes. For example, disclosed embodiments are useful for separating methane from air.
    Type: Application
    Filed: December 15, 2011
    Publication date: January 17, 2013
    Inventors: James A. Sawada, Edward J. Rode, Steven M. KUZNICKI, Christopher Chih Itao Lin
  • Patent number: 7902114
    Abstract: Using zeolites as the active adsorbent, adsorbent laminates have been fabricated with various sheet supports. These adsorbent laminates have been successfully operated for oxygen enrichment at high PSA cycle frequencies, such as upwards of at least 150 cycles per minute. Methods for making suitable adsorbent laminates are described. The methods generally involve forming a slurry comprising a liquid suspending agent, an adsorbent and a binder. Laminates are made by applying the slurry to support material or admixing support material with the slurry. The slurry can be applied to support material using a variety of techniques, including roll coaters, split roll coaters, electrophoretic deposition, etc. One method for making laminates by mixing support material with the adsorbent slurry comprises depositing the slurry onto a foraminous wire, draining the slurry material, and pressing the material to form a ceramic adsorbent paper. Spacers can be formed on adsorbent laminates to space one laminate from another.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 22, 2007
    Date of Patent: March 8, 2011
    Assignee: Xebec Adsorption Inc.
    Inventors: Bowie G. Keefer, Alain A. Carel, Brian G. Sellars, Ian S. D. Shaw, Belinda C. Larisch, David G. Doman, Frederick K. Lee, Andrea C. Gibbs, Bernard H. Hetzler, James A. Sawada, Aaron M. Pelman, Carl F. Hunter
  • Patent number: 7828877
    Abstract: An inventive adsorptive gas separation process is provided capable of producing a purified methane product gas as a light non-adsorbed product gas as opposed to a heavy desorbed exhaust gas component, from a feed gas mixture comprising at least methane, and carbon dioxide. In an embodiment of the invention, the feed gas mixture may comprise at least about 10% carbon dioxide, and the purified methane product gas may be desirably purified to contain less than about 5000 ppm carbon dioxide. In another embodiment of the invention, the feed gas mixture may comprise at least about 50% carbon dioxide, and the purified methane product gas may be desirably purified to contain less than about 5000 ppm carbon dioxide.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: November 7, 2005
    Date of Patent: November 9, 2010
    Assignee: Xebec Adsorption, Inc.
    Inventors: James A. Sawada, Matthew L. Babicki, Amy Chiu, Andre Boulet, Surajit Roy, Edward J. Rode
  • Publication number: 20100269694
    Abstract: Embodiments of crystalline, titanium silicate molecular sieves are described having a formula representing mole ratios of oxides of n M1O:TiO2:y SiO2:zH2O:wX where Mi refers to a metal cation or mixture of metal cations; n is from about 1 to about 2; y is from about 1 to about 10; z is from 0 to about 100; X is a halide anion other than fluorine, or combination of halide anions that excludes fluorine; and w is greater than 0. The pore size of the sieves can be adjusted by ion exchanging Mi cations with a suitable amount of another species. Embodiments of the invention are useful for various adsorptive fluid separation processes, including pressure swing adsorption processes. For example, disclosed embodiments are useful for separating methane from air.
    Type: Application
    Filed: June 22, 2007
    Publication date: October 28, 2010
    Applicant: The Governors of the University of Alberta
    Inventors: James A. Sawada, Edward J. Rode, Steven M. Kuznicki, Christopher Chih Hao Lin
  • Patent number: 7763098
    Abstract: Embodiments of a rapid cycle PSA apparatus are described that are useful for producing a hydrogen enriched product gas comprising not more than about 50 ppm carbon monoxide by volume and with a hydrogen gas recovery of at least about 70% by adsorptive separation from a syngas feed gas mixture comprising at least about 50 percent hydrogen and at least about 1 percent carbon monoxide by volume. One disclosed embodiment of a rapid cycle PSA apparatus comprised at least 3 adsorber elements each having at least one thin adsorbent sheet material which comprises at least one adsorbent material therein, and a bed size factor less than about 4.0 seconds. Embodiments of a rapid cycle PSA process also are described that utilize disclosed embodiments of the rapid-cycle PSA device.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: November 14, 2006
    Date of Patent: July 27, 2010
    Assignee: Xebec Adsorption Inc.
    Inventors: Soheil Alizadeh-Khiavi, James A. Sawada, Andrea C. Gibbs, Jeffrey Alvaji
  • Patent number: 7674539
    Abstract: A process and system for providing a hydrogen-containing gas stream to a fuel cell anode that includes providing a hydrogen-containing gas stream that includes carbon monoxide, introducing the hydrogen-containing gas stream into a pressure swing adsorption module that includes at least one carbon monoxide-selective adsorbent to produce a purified hydrogen-containing gas stream, and introducing the purified hydrogen-containing gas stream to the fuel cell anode. The pressure swing adsorption module can also include a second adsorbent and/or catalyst. Also disclosed is a fuel cell system coupled to an internal combustion engine and a fuel cell system that utilizes fuel cell waste heat for vaporizing a hydrocarbon/water mixture.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: April 12, 2006
    Date of Patent: March 9, 2010
    Assignee: Xebec Adsorption Inc.
    Inventors: Bowie G. Keefer, James A. Sawada, Erik P. Johannes, Surajit Roy, Michael J. Brown
  • Patent number: 7645324
    Abstract: Improved adsorbent sheet based parallel passage adsorbent structures for enhancing the kinetic selectivity of certain kinetic-controlled adsorption processes, such as PSA, TSA and PPSA processes, and combinations thereof, are provided. The enhancements in kinetic selectivity made possible through the implementation of the present inventive improved adsorbent structures may unexpectedly enable significant intensification of selected kinetic adsorption processes relative to attainable performance with conventional adsorbent materials in beaded or extruded form. Such process intensification enabled by the present inventive adsorbent structures may provide for increased adsorption cycle frequencies, and increased gas flow velocities within the adsorbent beds, which may increase the productivity and/or recovery of a kinetic adsorption system incorporating the inventive adsorbent structures.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: January 6, 2006
    Date of Patent: January 12, 2010
    Assignee: Xebec Adsorption Inc.
    Inventors: Edward J. Rode, Andre J. J. Boulet, Aaron M. Pelman, Matthew L. Babicki, Bowie G. Keefer, James A. Sawada, Soheil Alizadeh-Khiavi, Surajit Roy, Andrea C. Gibbs, Steven M. Kuznicki
  • Publication number: 20090025553
    Abstract: Using zeolites as the active adsorbent, adsorbent laminates have been fabricated with various sheet supports. These adsorbent laminates have been successfully operated for oxygen enrichment at high PSA cycle frequencies, such as upwards of at least 150 cycles per minute. Methods for making suitable adsorbent laminates are described. The methods generally involve forming a slurry comprising a liquid suspending agent, an adsorbent and a binder. Laminates are made by applying the slurry to support material or admixing support material with the slurry. The slurry can be applied to support material using a variety of techniques, including roll coaters, split roll coaters, electrophoretic deposition, etc. One method for making laminates by mixing support material with the adsorbent slurry comprises depositing the slurry onto a foraminous wire, draining the slurry material, and pressing the material to form a ceramic adsorbent paper. Spacers can be formed on adsorbent laminates to space one laminate from another.
    Type: Application
    Filed: October 22, 2007
    Publication date: January 29, 2009
    Inventors: Bowie G. Keefer, Alain A. Carel, Brian G. Sellars, Ian S.D. Shaw, Belinda C. Larisch, David G. Doman, Frederick K. Lee, Andrea C. Gibbs, Bernard H. Hetzler, James A. Sawada, Aaron M. Pelman, Carl F. Hunter
  • Patent number: 7300905
    Abstract: Using zeolites as the active adsorbent, adsorbent laminates have been fabricated with various sheet supports. These adsorbent laminates have been successfully operated for oxygen enrichment at high PSA cycle frequencies, such as upwards of at least 150 cycles per minute. Methods for making suitable adsorbent laminates are described. The methods generally involve forming a slurry comprising a liquid suspending agent, an adsorbent and a binder. Laminates are made by applying the slurry to support material or admixing support material with the slurry. The slurry can be applied to support material using a variety of techniques, including roll coaters, split roll coaters, electrophoretic deposition, etc. One method for making laminates by mixing support material with the adsorbent slurry comprises depositing the slurry onto a foraminous wire, draining the slurry material, and pressing the material to form a ceramic adsorbent paper. Spacers can be formed on adsorbent laminates to space one laminate from another.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: January 7, 2002
    Date of Patent: November 27, 2007
    Assignee: QuestAir Technologies Inc.
    Inventors: Bowie G. Keefer, Alain A. Carel, Brian G. Sellars, Ian S. D. Shaw, Belinda C. Larisch, David G. Dornan, Frederick K. Lee, Andrea C. Gibbs, Bernard H. Hetzler, James A. Sawada, Aaron M. Pelman, Carl F. Hunter
  • Publication number: 20070261551
    Abstract: An inventive adsorptive gas separation process is provided capable of producing a purified methane product gas as a light non-adsorbed product gas as opposed to a heavy desorbed exhaust gas component, from a feed gas mixture comprising at least methane, and carbon dioxide. In an embodiment of the invention, the feed gas mixture may comprise at least about 10% carbon dioxide, and the purified methane product gas may be desirably purified to contain less than about 5000 ppm carbon dioxide. In another embodiment of the invention, the feed gas mixture may comprise at least about 50% carbon dioxide, and the purified methane product gas may be desirably purified to contain less than about 5000 ppm carbon dioxide.
    Type: Application
    Filed: November 7, 2005
    Publication date: November 15, 2007
    Inventors: James Sawada, Matthew Babicki, Amy Chiu, Andre Boulet, Surajit Roy, Edward Rode
  • Publication number: 20070125228
    Abstract: Embodiments of a rapid cycle PSA apparatus are described that are useful for producing a hydrogen enriched product gas comprising not more than about 50 ppm carbon monoxide by volume and with a hydrogen gas recovery of at least about 70% by adsorptive separation from a syngas feed gas mixture comprising at least about 50 percent hydrogen and at least about 1 percent carbon monoxide by volume. One disclosed embodiment of a rapid cycle PSA apparatus comprised at least 3 adsorber elements each having at least one thin adsorbent sheet material which comprises at least one adsorbent material therein, and a bed size factor less than about 4.0 seconds. Embodiments of a rapid cycle PSA process also are described that utilize disclosed embodiments of the rapid-cycle PSA device.
    Type: Application
    Filed: November 14, 2006
    Publication date: June 7, 2007
    Inventors: Soheil Alizadeh-Khiavi, James Sawada, Andrea Gibbs, Jeffrey Alvaji
  • Patent number: 7189280
    Abstract: A method and system for adsorptive separation of a feed gas mixture provides for increased system efficiency and product recovery. The requirement for purge gas streams consuming desired product gas to regenerate adsorption beds is reduced through an inventive method for adsorbent selection and adsorption bed and process design.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: June 29, 2004
    Date of Patent: March 13, 2007
    Assignee: QuestAir Technologies Inc.
    Inventors: Soheil Alizadeh-Khiavi, Surajit Roy, James A. Sawada
  • Publication number: 20060182680
    Abstract: A process and system for providing a hydrogen-containing gas stream to a fuel cell anode that includes providing a hydrogen-containing gas stream that includes carbon monoxide, introducing the hydrogen-containing gas stream into a pressure swing adsorption module that includes at least one carbon monoxide-selective adsorbent to produce a purified hydrogen-containing gas stream, and introducing the purified hydrogen-containing gas stream to the fuel cell anode. The pressure swing adsorption module can also include a second adsorbent and/or catalyst. Also disclosed is a fuel cell system coupled to an internal combustion engine and a fuel cell system that utilizes fuel cell waste heat for vaporizing a hydrocarbon/water mixture.
    Type: Application
    Filed: April 12, 2006
    Publication date: August 17, 2006
    Inventors: Bowie Keefer, James Sawada, Erik Johannes, Surajit Roy, Michael Brown
  • Publication number: 20060169142
    Abstract: Improved adsorbent sheet based parallel passage adsorbent structures for enhancing the kinetic selectivity of certain kinetic-controlled adsorption processes, such as PSA, TSA and PPSA processes, and combinations thereof, are provided. The enhancements in kinetic selectivity made possible through the implementation of the present inventive improved adsorbent structures may unexpectedly enable significant intensification of selected kinetic adsorption processes relative to attainable performance with conventional adsorbent materials in beaded or extruded form. Such process intensification enabled by the present inventive adsorbent structures may provide for increased adsorption cycle frequencies, and increased gas flow velocities within the adsorbent beds, which may increase the productivity and/or recovery of a kinetic adsorption system incorporating the inventive adsorbent structures.
    Type: Application
    Filed: January 6, 2006
    Publication date: August 3, 2006
    Inventors: Edward Rode, Andre Boulet, Aaron Pelman, Matthew Babicki, Bowie Keefer, James Sawada, Soheil Alizadeh-Khiavi, Surajit Roy, Andrea Gibbs, Steven Kuznicki
  • Patent number: 7041272
    Abstract: A process and system for providing a hydrogen-containing gas stream to a fuel cell anode that includes providing a hydrogen-containing gas stream that includes carbon monoxide, introducing the hydrogen-containing gas stream into a pressure swing adsorption module that includes at least one carbon monoxide-selective adsorbent to produce a purified hydrogen-containing gas stream, and introducing the purified hydrogen-containing gas stream to the fuel cell anode. The pressure swing adsorption module can also include a second adsorbent and/or catalyst. Also disclosed is a fuel cell system coupled to an internal combustion engine and a fuel cell system that utilizes fuel cell waste heat for vaporizing a hydrocarbon/water mixture.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 26, 2001
    Date of Patent: May 9, 2006
    Assignee: QuestAir Technologies Inc.
    Inventors: Bowie G. Keefer, James A. Sawada, Erik P. Johannes, Surajit Roy, Michael J. Brown