Patents by Inventor Janet S. Gregg

Janet S. Gregg 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: 5804053
    Abstract: A process is disclosed, as well as apparatus useful therefor, for continuously electroplating a strip of reticulated foam using multiple electroplating zones that each contain electroplating bath. In each zone there is a cathode and an anode. In at least one electroplating zone there is an insoluble anode, typically as the sole anode. In some of the electroplating zones soluble anodes may be used. As a first cathode, there can be provided a cathode roll outside of the electroplating bath. The reticulated foam is guided in the bath past the anodes, as well as past cathodes, e.g., including a cathode roll which may be positioned outside of the bath. The resulting electroplated foam emerging from the bath has an improved electroplate weight distribution and the process achieves enhanced efficiencies and economies of operation.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 25, 1996
    Date of Patent: September 8, 1998
    Assignee: ELTECH Systems Corporation
    Inventors: Anthony J. Vaccaro, Janet S. Gregg, Daniel W. Gibbons, James R. Brannan, Gerald R. Pohto, Jean M. Hinden
  • Patent number: 5738907
    Abstract: A porous product, typically a metal foam sheet, is produced as a tailored, engineered product. The porous product can have enhanced strength, as well as more desirable electrical and mechanical properties. The product which first exists typically as a flexible, generally polymeric foam sheet in strip form, which strip is produced in the longitudinal direction, is stretched in a direction other than its direction of production. The porous product can have pores which would be anisotropic in form in usual production, which are stretched to at least substantially isotropic form. The product can even be tailored to have pores which are anisotropic in the direction of the stretch. Thus, an engineered product can be produced which, for example, as an open-cell metal foam prepared from a polymeric foam can have conductivity, both thermal and electrical, as well as strength and ductility, tailored for greater uniformity and performance.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: August 4, 1995
    Date of Patent: April 14, 1998
    Assignee: Eltech Systems Corporation
    Inventors: Anthony J. Vaccaro, Kenneth J. Gregg, Daniel W. Gibbons, Janet S. Gregg, John R. Griesser