Patents by Inventor John Gilbertson

John Gilbertson 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: 10317602
    Abstract: The present disclosure describes luminescent solar concentrators that include photoluminescent nanoparticles. The photoluminescent nanoparticles include a semiconductor nanocrystal that sensitizes the luminescence of a defect. The defect can include, for example, an atom, a cluster of atoms, or a lattice vacancy. The defect can be incorporated into the semiconductor nanocrystal, adsorbed onto, or otherwise associated with the surface of the semiconductor nanocrystal.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: April 12, 2018
    Date of Patent: June 11, 2019
    Assignees: Western Washington University, University of Washington Through Its Center For Commercialization
    Inventors: David Patrick, John Gilbertson, Stephen McDowall, Christian Erickson, Daniel R. Gamelin, Liam Bradshaw, Emily Jane McLaurin, Kathryn E. Knowles
  • Publication number: 20180231705
    Abstract: The present disclosure describes luminescent solar concentrators that include photoluminescent nanoparticles. The photoluminescent nanoparticles include a semiconductor nanocrystal that sensitizes the luminescence of a defect. The defect can include, for example, an atom, a cluster of atoms, or a lattice vacancy. The defect can be incorporated into the semiconductor nanocrystal, adsorbed onto, or otherwise associated with the surface of the semiconductor nanocrystal.
    Type: Application
    Filed: April 12, 2018
    Publication date: August 16, 2018
    Applicants: Western Washington University, University of Washington Through Its Center For Commercialization
    Inventors: David Patrick, John Gilbertson, Stephen McDowall, Christian Erickson, Daniel R. Gamelin, Liam Bradshaw, Emily Jane McLaurin, Katherine E. Knowles
  • Patent number: 9964680
    Abstract: The present disclosure describes luminescent solar concentrators that include photoluminescent nanoparticles. The photoluminescent nanoparticles include a semiconductor nanocrystal that sensitizes the luminescence of a defect. The defect can include, for example, an atom, a cluster of atoms, or a lattice vacancy. The defect can be incorporated into the semiconductor nanocrystal, adsorbed onto, or otherwise associated with the surface of the semiconductor nanocrystal.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: July 1, 2014
    Date of Patent: May 8, 2018
    Assignees: Western Washington University, University of Washington through its Center for Commercialization
    Inventors: David Patrick, John Gilbertson, Stephen McDowall, Christian Erickson, Daniel R. Gamelin, Liam Bradshaw, Emily Jane McLaurin, Kathryn E. Knowles
  • Publication number: 20160327714
    Abstract: The present disclosure describes luminescent solar concentrators that include photoluminescent nanoparticles. The photoluminescent nanoparticles include a semiconductor nanocrystal that sensitizes the luminescence of a defect. The defect can include, for example, an atom, a cluster of atoms, or a lattice vacancy. The defect can be incorporated into the semiconductor nanocrystal, adsorbed onto, or otherwise associated with the surface of the semiconductor nanocrystal.
    Type: Application
    Filed: July 1, 2014
    Publication date: November 10, 2016
    Applicants: Western Washington University, University of Washington through its Center for Commericalization
    Inventors: David Patrick, John Gilbertson, Stephen McDowall, Christian Erickson, Daniel Gamelin, Liam Bradshaw, Emily McLaurin, Kathryn Knowles
  • Publication number: 20110253198
    Abstract: Luminescent solar concentrator (LSC) devices are provided herein. The provided LSCs include devices having an oriented luminophore in at least one layer of the LSC device. Other LSC devices include LSCs having both a collector wave guide, incorporating a luminophore, and a transport wave guide, having no luminophore, into which luminesced light from the collector wave guide travels. Additionally, wave guides for use in LSCs are provided that include guided-wave plasmon-polariton modes for improved optical transmission within LSC devices. The devices provided herein, either alone, or in combination, provide improved LSC device performance, particularly with regard to overall device efficiency.
    Type: Application
    Filed: March 4, 2011
    Publication date: October 20, 2011
    Applicant: WESTERN WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY
    Inventors: David Patrick, Janelle Leger, Stephen McDowall, John Gilbertson, Brad Johnson
  • Publication number: 20060204072
    Abstract: An imaging apparatus. The imaging apparatus may find an area in which a specimen is present, then focus on the specimen and capture images of the specimen during continuous stage motion.
    Type: Application
    Filed: May 9, 2006
    Publication date: September 14, 2006
    Inventors: Arthur Wetzel, John Gilbertson, Jeffrey Beckstead, Patricia Feineigle, Christopher Hauser, Frank Palmieri
  • Publication number: 20060045320
    Abstract: Imaging apparatuses and methods that capture a low-resolution image of a slide, identify a region of interest, and capture a high-resolution image of the region of interest.
    Type: Application
    Filed: October 26, 2005
    Publication date: March 2, 2006
    Inventors: Arthur Wetzel, John Gilbertson, Jeffrey Beckstead, Patricia Feineigle, Christopher Hauser, Frank Palmieri
  • Publication number: 20060029266
    Abstract: A system for processing a thumbnail image from a microscope slide to determine tissue locations on the slide. The system comprises an image cropping component, a tissue finding component, and a scan control component. The image cropping component crops the thumbnail image and removes portions of the image that fall outside of determined slide boundaries. The cropped image from the image cropping component is inputted into the tissue finding component. The tissue finding component identifies tissue regions by applying a sequence of filters that incorporate knowledge of typical appearance and location of tissue and non-tissue slide regions. The tissue finding component outputs a tiling matrix whose values indicate which tiles should be imaged. The scan control component interprets the tiling matrix and transposes positions of the tiling matrix into actual stage coordinate for a microscopic imaging.
    Type: Application
    Filed: September 6, 2005
    Publication date: February 9, 2006
    Inventors: Arthur Wetzel, John Gilbertson, Jeffrey Beckstead, Patricia Feineigle, Christopher Hauser, Frank Palmieri