Patents by Inventor Peter Colter

Peter Colter 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).

  • Publication number: 20070068572
    Abstract: A method of disordering a layer of an optoelectronic device including; growing a plurality of lower layers; introducing an isoelectronic surfactant; growing a layer; allowing the surfactant to desorb; and growing subsequent layers all performed at a low pressure of 25 torr.
    Type: Application
    Filed: September 7, 2006
    Publication date: March 29, 2007
    Inventors: Christopher Fetzer, James Ermer, Richard King, Peter Colter
  • Publication number: 20050274409
    Abstract: A multijunction solar cell includes a first photoactive subcell layer having a first-subcell lattice parameter and a composition including (a) at least one Group III element, at least one Group V element other than (nitrogen, phosphorus), and (nitrogen, phosphorus), or (b) a material selected from the group including GaInAsBi, GaInAsSb, GaInAsP, ZnGeAs2, or BGaInAs. The multijunction solar cell also has a substrate having a substrate lattice parameter different from the first-subcell lattice parameter, and a composition-graded buffer layer between the first photoactive subcell layer and the substrate and having a buffer-layer lattice parameter graded between the first-subcell lattice parameter and the substrate lattice parameter.
    Type: Application
    Filed: June 15, 2004
    Publication date: December 15, 2005
    Applicant: THE BOEING COMPANY
    Inventors: Christopher Fetzer, Richard King, Peter Colter
  • Publication number: 20050274411
    Abstract: A solar cell includes a first layer having a first-layer lattice parameter, a second layer having a second-layer lattice parameter different from the first-layer lattice parameter, wherein the second layer includes a photoactive second-layer material; and a third layer having a third-layer lattice parameter different from the second-layer lattice parameter, wherein the third layer includes a photoactive third-layer material. A transparent buffer layer extends between and contacts the second layer and the third layer and has a buffer-layer lattice parameter that varies with increasing distance from the second layer toward the third layer, so as to lattice match to the second layer and to the third layer. There may be additional subcell layers and buffer layers in the solar cell.
    Type: Application
    Filed: June 15, 2004
    Publication date: December 15, 2005
    Inventors: Richard King, Christopher Fetzer, Peter Colter
  • Patent number: 6586669
    Abstract: A perfectly or approximately lattice-matched semiconductor layer for use in an electronic or optoelectronic device. Perfectly lattice-matched (“PLM”) semiconductor layers prevent or lessen the formation and propagation of crystal defects in semiconductor devices, defects that can decrease the performance characteristics of the device. For some semiconductors, the ability to optimize composition-dependent properties over the wider range of compositions that approximately lattice-matched (“ALM”) semiconductor layers allows is more advantageous than the lower strain and dislocation density encountered for PLM layers. In addition, PLM cell layers and ALM cell layers are also expected to result in improved radiation resistance characteristics for some semiconductor devices.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: June 6, 2001
    Date of Patent: July 1, 2003
    Assignee: The Boeing Company
    Inventors: Richard Roland King, James H. Ermer, Peter Colter, Nasser H. Karam
  • Publication number: 20020195137
    Abstract: A perfectly or approximately lattice-matched semiconductor layer for use in an electronic or optoelectronic device. Perfectly lattice-matched (“PLM”) semiconductor layers prevent or lessen the formation and propagation of crystal defects in semiconductor devices, defects that can decrease the performance characteristics of the device. For some semiconductors, the ability to optimize composition-dependent properties over the wider range of compositions that approximately lattice-matched (“ALM”) semiconductor layers allows is more advantageous than the lower strain and dislocation density encountered for PLM layers. In addition, PLM cell layers and ALM cell layers are also expected to result in improved radiation resistance characteristics for some semiconductor devices.
    Type: Application
    Filed: June 6, 2001
    Publication date: December 26, 2002
    Inventors: Richard Roland King, James H. Ermer, Peter Colter, Nasser H. Karam