Patents by Inventor Kyle Schmid

Kyle Schmid 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: 8871893
    Abstract: We disclose methods and compositions for preparation of stimuli-responsive plastics that are capable of responding to chemical and/or physical signals in their environment. In one embodiment the plastics consist of patterned mixtures of poly(phthalaldehyde) polymers in which each polymer contains a different end-capping group (also called a “trigger”), responsive to a different signal. Other embodiments use different polymers and different triggers. The plastics may be homogeneous in composition, but each polymer within the plastic is capable of responding to a different signal and depolymerizing once this signal reacts with the trigger. This process of depolymerization enables the plastic to alter its physical features non-linearly to external signals: i.e., the degree of change in physical form is much larger than the intensity of the initial signal.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: May 10, 2011
    Date of Patent: October 28, 2014
    Assignee: The Penn State Research Foundation
    Inventors: Scott T. Phillips, Wanji Seo, Jessica Robbins, Michael Olah, Kyle Schmid, Anthony Michael DiLauro
  • Publication number: 20140242623
    Abstract: We disclose methods and compositions for preparation of stimuli-responsive plastics that are capable of responding to chemical and/or physical signals in their environment. In one embodiment the plastics consist of patterned mixtures of poly(phthalaldehyde) polymers in which each polymer contains a different end-capping group (also called a “trigger”), responsive to a different signal. Other embodiments use different polymers and different triggers. The plastics may be homogeneous in composition, but each polymer within the plastic is capable of responding to a different signal and depolymerizing once this signal reacts with the trigger. This process of depolymerization enables the plastic to alter its physical features non-linearly to external signals: i.e., the degree of change in physical form is much larger than the intensity of the initial signal.
    Type: Application
    Filed: May 10, 2011
    Publication date: August 28, 2014
    Inventors: Scott T. Phillips, Wanji Seo, Jessica Robbins, Michael Olah, Kyle Schmid, Anthony Michael DiLauro