Patents by Inventor Norman A. Portnoy
Norman A. Portnoy 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).
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Publication number: 20090061052Abstract: A polysaccharide casing and a collagen/polysaccharide casing, and method of manufacturing the casings, are disclosed. The casings maintain their structural integrity over time and do not adversely affect the quality and taste of the encased foodstuff.Type: ApplicationFiled: July 30, 2008Publication date: March 5, 2009Applicant: RED ARROW PRODUCTS CO., LLC.Inventors: Peter R. Visser, Gary L. Underwood, Norman Portnoy, Paul E. DuCharme, JR.
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Patent number: 5451364Abstract: In a method for forming a cellulose tube suitable for use as a food casing, in which a solution of nonderivatized cellulose, tertiary amine N-oxide and water is extruded through a die gap and the extruded tube downwardly flowed through an air length while being internally cooled, and passed into a water bath, the tube transverse direction tensile strength is substantially increased by drawing the extruded tube through an air length of at least about six inches.Type: GrantFiled: January 10, 1994Date of Patent: September 19, 1995Assignee: Viskase CorporationInventors: Paul E. Ducharme, Jr., Edward M. Kajiwara, Norman A. Portnoy
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Patent number: 4992539Abstract: A cold-water-swellable granular starch which affords aqueous solutions or dispersions having high-viscosity and/or excellent clarity is provided. In one embodiment, the granular starch is made cold-water swellable by contact with aqueous alcohol, then derivatized with an .alpha.-halocarboxylic acid, and then isolated under condition which inhibit esterification of the granular starch, e.g. high pH, to afford a starch that has excellent paste clarity. In other embodiments, the cold-water-swellable granular starch is crosslinked to afford a starch that has very high paste viscosity.Type: GrantFiled: March 24, 1988Date of Patent: February 12, 1991Assignee: A. E. Staley Manufacturing CompanyInventors: Norman A. Portnoy, James E. Eastman
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Patent number: 4716186Abstract: Cold water soluble methylated, ethylated or carboxymethylated non-gelatinized granular starch materials are provided which are particularly well suited for use as thickeners and/or rheology modifiers in latex paint compositions. Such starch materials have a methyl, ethyl or carboxymethyl degree of substitution (D.S.) of from about 0.15 to about 1 and have a ratio of total inorganic anion content (in weight percent on a starch material dry solids weight basis) to methyl, ethyl or carboxymethyl D.S. of about 14 or less.Type: GrantFiled: April 9, 1986Date of Patent: December 29, 1987Assignee: A. E. Staley Manufacturing CompanyInventors: Norman A. Portnoy, Larry P. Avery
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Patent number: 4123398Abstract: A regenerated cellulosic product is made flame resistant by the addition to the cellulosic solution from which the product is regenerated of from 3 to 7% by weight of colloidal antimony pentoxide and from 5 to 30% by weight of polyvinyl bromide.Type: GrantFiled: May 25, 1977Date of Patent: October 31, 1978Assignee: International Telephone and Telegraph CorporationInventors: David G. Unrau, Norman A. Portnoy, Peter J. Hartmann
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Patent number: 4108748Abstract: Acrylated cotton fabric is reacted with water-N,N-dimethylformamide solutions of acrylamide and then exposed to near ultraviolet light in an inert atmosphere to produce crosslinked acrylated cotton fabrics with durable press properties. The treatment is also applicable to methacrylated cotton fabric and the results obtained are similar.Type: GrantFiled: March 28, 1975Date of Patent: August 22, 1978Assignee: The United States of America as represented by the Secretary of AgricultureInventors: Norman A. Portnoy, Jett C. Arthur, Jr., Matthew F. Margavio, Marie C. Nelson
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Patent number: 4086418Abstract: Hollow cellulosic fibers are produced by nitrosating and dissolving a cellulosic material in an aprotic solvent selected from the group consisting of a dialkylacylamide and dimethylsulfoxide and regenerating the dissolved cellulose by contacting the cellulose solution with a regenerant. The regenerant is n-octanol where the solvent is a dialkylacylamide and n-hexanol where the solvent is dimethylsulfoxide. The fibers are hollow as regenerated and require no special spinnerette designs nor special spinning conditions.Type: GrantFiled: February 27, 1976Date of Patent: April 25, 1978Assignee: International Telephone and Telegraph CorporationInventors: Albin Frank Turbak, Richard Benjamin Hammer, Norman A. Portnoy, Arthur C. West
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Patent number: 4082617Abstract: Recovery of the chemical components of a cellulosic organic solvent regenerating solution containing a dialkylacylamide, a lower aliphatic monohydric alcohol, a nitrite of the alcohol and nitric acid. The process comprises distilling the solution to remove the alcohol nitrite and alcohol, leaving the dialkylacylamide and nitric acid, recovering the alcohol, hydrolyzing to convert the alcohol nitrite to the alcohol and nitrous acid, neutralizing the nitric and nitrous acid with an alkali or alkaline earth metal oxide or hydroxide and distilling the solution to remove water and to separate and recover the remaining alcohol, the dialkylacylamide and the nitrate and nitrite salts. The nitrite and nitrate salts are converted by pyrolysis to nitrogen dioxide. The process results in substantially total recovery of the process chemicals.Type: GrantFiled: August 18, 1976Date of Patent: April 4, 1978Assignee: International Telephone and Telegraph CorporationInventors: Norman A. Portnoy, David Paul Anderson
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Patent number: 4076933Abstract: Shaped cellulosic fibers are produced by nitrosating and dissolving a cellulosic material in an aprotic solvent selected from the group consisting of a dialkylacylamide and dimethylsulfoxide and regenerating the dissolved cellulose by contacting the cellulose solution with a regenerant. The regenerant is butanol, pentanol or benzyl alcohol where the solvent is a dialkylacylamide and propanol, butanol or benzyl alcohol where the solvent is dimethylsulfoxide. The fibers have a generally crenulated shape as regenerated and require no special spinnerette designs nor special spinning conditions.Type: GrantFiled: February 27, 1976Date of Patent: February 28, 1978Assignee: International Telephone and Telegraph CorporationInventors: Albin Frank Turbak, Richard Benjamin Hammer, Norman A. Portnoy, Arthur C. West
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Patent number: 4076932Abstract: Regenerated cellulosic articles are produced by nitrosating and dissolving cellulose in a dialkylacylamide solvent, such as dimethylformamide, and regenerating the dissolved cellulose by passing into a coagulant bath. The coagulant comprises water or a 1 to 4 carbon atom aliphatic monohydric alcohol and a soluble reactive base, the latter in an amount ranging from 6% to 25% by weight of the regenerant. The process produces regenerated cellulose products of improved resistance to alkaline solubility.Type: GrantFiled: February 27, 1976Date of Patent: February 28, 1978Assignee: International Telephone and Telegraph CorporationInventors: Richard Benjamin Hammer, Albin Frank Turbak, Norman A. Portnoy, West, Arthur C.
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Patent number: 4073660Abstract: Recovery of the chemical components of a cellulosic organic solvent regenerating solution containing a dialkylacylamide, water, nitrous and nitric acid. The process comprises neutralizing the solution to form the metal salts of nitrous and nitric acid, distilling the neutralized solution to remove and recover the water and dialkylacylamide solvent and pyrolyzing the metal salts in the presence of oxygen to remove and recover nitrogen dioxide gas. The process results in substantially total recovery of the process chemicals.Type: GrantFiled: August 18, 1976Date of Patent: February 14, 1978Assignee: International Telephone and Telegraph CorporationInventors: Norman A. Portnoy, David P. Anderson
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Patent number: 4044090Abstract: A regenerated cellulosic product is produced by nitrosating and dissolving a cellulosic material in a solution comprising a dialkylacylamide solvent and adding from 2 to 25% by weight, based on the weight of the solution, of a tertiary amine to form a soluble cellulose nitrite ester, contacting the cellulose ester with a coagulant therefore, stretching the coagulated cellulose ester prior to complete regeneration thereof and then completing the regeneration of the cellulose to produce a regenerated cellulosic product.Type: GrantFiled: July 9, 1975Date of Patent: August 23, 1977Assignee: International Telephone and Telegraph CorporationInventor: Norman A. Portnoy
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Patent number: 4022631Abstract: Cellulosic articles are regenerated from a cellulosic solution formed by the addition of cellulosic material to dimethyl sulfoxide and formaldehyde or paraformaldehyde by contacting the cellulosic solution with an aqueous solution having a pH greater than seven of a water soluble nucleophilic compound selected from the group consisting of ammonia, ammonium salts, saturated amines and salts of sulfur compounds in which the sulfur has a valence of less than six.Type: GrantFiled: May 19, 1975Date of Patent: May 10, 1977Assignee: International Telephone and Telegraph CorporationInventors: Albin F. Turbak, Richard B. Hammer, Norman A. Portnoy, Richard E. Davies
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Patent number: H507Abstract: Methylated, ethylated or carboxymethylated starch products which have, per anhydroglucose unit within the starch molecule, an average of from about 0.03 to about 1.0 methyl, ethyl or carboxymethyl substituents covalently bonded thereto and which contain a combined total of less than 1 weight percent, on a dry starch solids weight basis, of polyvalent inorganic anions, monovalent inorganic anions and methylsulfate and ethylsulfate anions are particularly well suited for use as protective colloids in emulsion polymerization or copolymerization processes.Type: GrantFiled: April 20, 1987Date of Patent: August 2, 1988Assignee: A. E. Staley Manufacturing, division of Staley Continental, Inc.Inventors: Norman A. Portnoy, Frank T. Orthoefer
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Patent number: H1032Abstract: Processes for manufacturing starch copolymer compositions are provided. In one process, a modified starch is reacted with a hydrophilic vinyl monomer to produce a starch copolymer gel which is, in turn, divided in a plurality of gel fragments. The gel fragments are then dried with a stream of gel to produce a flowable, particulate starch copolymer composition. In another process, water is evaporated from the copolymer gel and further polymerization of vinyl monomers is inhibited during the evaporating by any of a variety of means such as reducing the level of residual vinyl monomer or avoiding conditions which initiate polymerization.Type: GrantFiled: June 27, 1990Date of Patent: March 3, 1992Assignee: A. E. Staley Manufacturing CompanyInventors: John C. Arnold, Robert A. Mooth, Norman A. Portnoy, Keith D. Stanley