Patents by Inventor Phillip Jenkins
Phillip Jenkins 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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Patent number: 11194884Abstract: A method for facilitating identification of navigation regions in a web page based on document object model (DOM) analysis is provided. In one embodiment, the method includes analyzing the web page for features. The features include at least one of: interactive elements, content regions, link region roots, or landmarks. The method also includes representing the features in a tree structure and analyzing the tree structure for a link density to identify non-main landmarks, a reading order, and main content roots. The method further includes enabling a region navigation for the web page based on the identified non-main landmarks, reading order, and main content roots.Type: GrantFiled: June 19, 2019Date of Patent: December 7, 2021Assignee: International Business Machines CorporationInventors: Thomas Andrew Brunet, Shunguo Yan, Phillip Jenkins, Kevin Tan
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Publication number: 20200401646Abstract: A method for facilitating identification of navigation regions in a web page based on document object model (DOM) analysis is provided. In one embodiment, the method includes analyzing the web page for features. The features include at least one of: interactive elements, content regions, link region roots, or landmarks. The method also includes representing the features in a tree structure and analyzing the tree structure for a link density to identify non-main landmarks, a reading order, and main content roots. The method further includes enabling a region navigation for the web page based on the identified non-main landmarks, reading order, and main content roots.Type: ApplicationFiled: June 19, 2019Publication date: December 24, 2020Applicant: INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS MACHINES CORPORATIONInventors: Thomas Andrew Brunet, Shunguo Yan, Phillip Jenkins, Kevin Tan
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Patent number: 10852188Abstract: A spectral radiometer system, measures incoming light intensity and spectral distribution in different wavelength-bands. An additional data storage device allows recording of the measured data. The inclusive sensor system yields very high sensitivity to incoming light. Furthermore, outstanding linearity of the detector response over several orders of magnitude of incoming light is achieved. Additional benefits are ultra low power consumption and minimum size. The sensor system can be used in remote solar radiation monitoring applications like mobile solar power units as well as in long-term environmental monitoring systems where high precision and low power consumption is a necessity.Type: GrantFiled: April 17, 2018Date of Patent: December 1, 2020Assignee: The Government of the United States of America, as represented by the Secretary of the NavyInventors: Phillip Jenkins, Robert J. Walters, Raymond Hoheisel, David Scheiman, Justin Lorentzen
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Patent number: 10593824Abstract: A method for making an ultra-thin, flexible crystalline silicon solar cell from thick, inflexible cells. A thick, inflexible cell having a plurality of electrical contacts on the back side thereof is adhered to a mount by means of a temporary bonding adhesive tape and a thickness of the mounted stack. A thickness of the bonding tape and the back-side contacts is determined and compared to a desired thickness of the final cell. Excess material is ground from the front side of the stack to obtain a thinned stack having the desired thickness and the thinned stack is removed from the mount to produce an ultra-thin, flexible rear-contact Si solar cell having a total thickness of less than 80 ?m and a bending radius of less than 20 mm. The front surface can be textured, with a passivation layer and/or a dielectric layer being deposited thereon.Type: GrantFiled: February 1, 2019Date of Patent: March 17, 2020Assignee: The Government of the United States of America, as represented by the Secretary of the NavyInventors: Woojun Yoon, David Scheiman, Phillip Jenkins, Robert J. Walters
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Patent number: 10553743Abstract: A novel, low cost method for manufacturing flexible crystalline ultra-thin Si solar cells using previously fabricated inflexible crystalline Si solar cells. A stack of metal layers is coated onto a front side of previously completed inflexible crystalline Si solar cells. The stack serves as a bonding layer as well as an electrically conducting layer between the inflexible solar cell and the carrier substrate. The front side of the coated inflexible Si solar cell is bonded onto the carrier substrate. Back side layers from the starting inflexible solar cell are removed, as is much of the base layer, so that only a thin base layer remains, with the thin base layer and emitter region having a total thickness of between 1 ?m and 30 ?m and the final cell having a total thickness of about 10 to about 125 ?m.Type: GrantFiled: November 20, 2018Date of Patent: February 4, 2020Assignee: The Government of the United States of America, as represented by the Secretary of the NavyInventors: Woojun Yoon, Phillip Jenkins, Robert J. Walters, David Scheiman
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Patent number: 10530294Abstract: Photovoltaic (PV) device comprising an ultra-thin radiation-tolerant PV absorber mounted on a flexible film having an embedded persistent phosphor and having a plurality of interdigitated top and bottom contacts on the top of the PV absorber. The PV absorber is ultra-thin, e.g., typically having a thickness of 300 nm or less for a III-V-based absorber. The phosphor absorbs some of the photons incident on the device and then discharges them for use by the device in generating electrical power during times when the device is not illuminated by the sun.Type: GrantFiled: June 2, 2017Date of Patent: January 7, 2020Assignee: The Government of the United States of America, as represented by the Secretary of the NavyInventors: Louise C. Hirst, Michael K. Yakes, Cory D. Cress, Phillip Jenkins, Jeffrey H. Warner, Kenneth Schmieder, Robert J. Walters
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Patent number: 10483417Abstract: A semiconductor device that utilizes intraband photon absorption in quantum dots to provide a capacitive photodetector. The presence of the quantum dots creates confined energy states within the photodetector device. Electrons are trapped in these confined energy states. When the photodetector is illuminated by light having an appropriate photon energy, the stored electrons are released to the conduction band, causing a change in the capacitance of the photodetector. By measuring this change in capacitance, light incident on the photodetector can be detected and quantified.Type: GrantFiled: February 23, 2018Date of Patent: November 19, 2019Assignee: The Government of the United States of America, as represented by the Secretary of the NavyInventors: Michael K. Yakes, María González, Phillip Jenkins, Robert J. Walters, Antonio Marti Vega, Elisa Antolín Fernández, Esther López Estrada
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Publication number: 20190245111Abstract: A method for making an ultra-thin, flexible crystalline silicon solar cell from thick, inflexible cells. A thick, inflexible cell having a plurality of electrical contacts on the back side thereof is adhered to a mount by means of a temporary bonding adhesive tape and a thickness of the mounted stack. A thickness of the bonding tape and the back-side contacts is determined and compared to a desired thickness of the final cell. Excess material is ground from the front side of the stack to obtain a thinned stack having the desired thickness and the thinned stack is removed from the mount to produce an ultra-thin, flexible rear-contact Si solar cell having a total thickness of less than 80 ?m and a bending radius of less than 20 mm. The front surface can be textured, with a passivation layer and/or a dielectric layer being deposited thereon.Type: ApplicationFiled: February 1, 2019Publication date: August 8, 2019Applicant: The Government of the United States of America, as represented by the Secretary of the NavyInventors: Woojun Yoon, David Scheiman, Phillip Jenkins, Robert J. Walters
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Publication number: 20190157497Abstract: A novel, low cost method for manufacturing flexible crystalline ultra-thin Si solar cells using previously fabricated inflexible crystalline Si solar cells. A stack of metal layers is coated onto a front side of previously completed inflexible crystalline Si solar cells. The stack serves as a bonding layer as well as an electrically conducting layer between the inflexible solar cell and the carrier substrate. The front side of the coated inflexible Si solar cell is bonded onto the carrier substrate. Back side layers from the starting inflexible solar cell are removed, as is much of the base layer, so that only a thin base layer remains, with the thin base layer and emitter region having a total thickness of between 1 ?m and 30 ?m and the final cell having a total thickness of about 10 to about 125 ?m.Type: ApplicationFiled: November 20, 2018Publication date: May 23, 2019Applicant: The Government of the United States of America, as represented by the Secretary of the NavyInventors: Woojun Yoon, Phillip Jenkins, Robert J. Walters, David Scheiman
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Publication number: 20180248058Abstract: A semiconductor device that utilizes intraband photon absorption in quantum dots to provide a capacitive photodetector. The presence of the quantum dots creates confined energy states within the photodetector device. Electrons are trapped in these confined energy states. When the photodetector is illuminated by light having an appropriate photon energy, the stored electrons are released to the conduction band, causing a change in the capacitance of the photodetector. By measuring this change in capacitance, light incident on the photodetector can be detected and quantified.Type: ApplicationFiled: February 23, 2018Publication date: August 30, 2018Applicant: The Government of the United States of America, as represented by the Secretary of the NavyInventors: Michael K. Yakes, María González, Phillip Jenkins, Robert J. Walters, Antonio Marti Vega, Elisa Antolín Fernández, Esther López Estrada
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Publication number: 20180231417Abstract: A spectral radiometer system, measures incoming light intensity and spectral distribution in different wavelength-bands. An additional data storage device allows recording of the measured data. The inclusive sensor system yields very high sensitivity to incoming light. Furthermore, outstanding linearity of the detector response over several orders of magnitude of incoming light is achieved. Additional benefits are ultra low power consumption and minimum size. The sensor system can be used in remote solar radiation monitoring applications like mobile solar power units as well as in long-term environmental monitoring systems where high precision and low power consumption is a necessity.Type: ApplicationFiled: April 17, 2018Publication date: August 16, 2018Inventors: Phillip Jenkins, Robert J. Walters, Raymond Hoheisel, David Scheiman, Justin Lorentzen
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Publication number: 20170353149Abstract: Photovoltaic (PV) device comprising an ultra-thin radiation-tolerant PV absorber mounted on a flexible film having an embedded persistent phosphor and having a plurality of interdigitated top and bottom contacts on the top of the PV absorber. The PV absorber is ultra-thin, e.g., typically having a thickness of 300 nm or less for a III-V-based absorber. The phosphor absorbs some of the photons incident on the device and then discharges them for use by the device in generating electrical power during times when the device is not illuminated by the sun.Type: ApplicationFiled: June 2, 2017Publication date: December 7, 2017Applicant: The Government of the United States of America, as represented by the Secretary of the NavyInventors: Louise C. Hirst, Michael K. Yakes, Cory D. Cress, Phillip Jenkins, Jeffrey H. Warner, Kenneth Schmieder, Robert J. Walters
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Publication number: 20150325720Abstract: A multijunction (MJ) solar cell grown on an InP substrate using materials that are lattice-matched to InP. In an exemplary three-junction embodiment, the top cell is formed from In1-xAlxAs1-ySby (with x and y adjusted so as to achieve lattice-matching with InP, hereafter referred to as InAlAsSb), the middle cell from In1-a-bGaaAlbAs (with a and b adjusted so as to achieve lattice-matching with InP, hereafter referred to as InGaAlAs), and the bottom cell also from InGaAlAs, but with a much lower Al composition, which in some embodiments can be zero so that the material is InGaAs. Tunnel junctions (TJs) connect the junctions and allow photo-generated current to flow. In an exemplary embodiment, an InAlAsSb TJ connects the first and second junctions, while an InGaAlAs TJ connects the second and third junctions.Type: ApplicationFiled: June 16, 2015Publication date: November 12, 2015Applicant: The Government of the United States of America, as represented by the Secretary of the NavyInventors: Robert J. Walters, Phillip Jenkins, Maria Gonzalez, Igor Vurgaftman, Jerry R. Meyer, Joshua Abell, Nicholas Ekins-Daukes, Jessica Adams, Paul Stavrinou, Michael K. Yakes, Joseph G. Tischler, Cory D. Cress, Matthew P. Lumb, Ngai Chan
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Publication number: 20130048063Abstract: A multijunction (MJ) solar cell grown on an InP substrate using materials that are lattice-matched to InP. In an exemplary three-junction embodiment, the top cell is formed from In1-xAlxAs1-ySby (with x and y adjusted so as to achieve lattice-matching with InP, hereafter referred to as InAlAsSb), the middle cell from In1-a-bGaaAlbAs (with a and b adjusted so as to achieve lattice-matching with InP, hereafter referred to as InGaAlAs), and the bottom cell also from InGaAlAs, but with a much lower Al composition, which in some embodiments can be zero so that the material is InGaAs. Tunnel junctions (TJs) connect the junctions and allow photo-generated current to flow. In an exemplary embodiment, an InAlAsSb TJ connects the first and second junctions, while an InGaAlAs TJ connects the second and third junctions.Type: ApplicationFiled: August 23, 2012Publication date: February 28, 2013Applicant: The Government of the United States of America, as represented by the Secretary of the NavyInventors: Robert J. Walters, Phillip Jenkins, Maria Gonzalez, Igor Vurgaftman, Jerry R. Meyer, Joshua Abell, Matthew P. Lumb, Michael K. Yakes, Joseph G. Tischler, Cory Cress, Nicholas Ekins-Daukes, Paul Stavrinou, Jessica Adams, Ngai Chan
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Patent number: 7867640Abstract: An alpha voltaic battery includes at least one layer of a semiconductor material comprising at least one p/n junction, at least one absorption and conversion layer on the at least one layer of semiconductor layer, and at least one alpha particle emitter. The absorption and conversion layer prevents at least a portion of alpha particles from the alpha particle emitter from damaging the p/n junction in the layer of semiconductor material. The absorption and conversion layer also converts at least a portion of energy from the alpha particles into electron-hole pairs for collection by the one p/n junction in the layer of semiconductor material.Type: GrantFiled: August 22, 2008Date of Patent: January 11, 2011Assignees: Rochester Institute of Technology, The United States of America as represented by the Administrator of the National Aeronautics and Space AdministrationInventors: Ryne P. Raffaelle, Phillip Jenkins, David Wilt, David Scheiman, Donald Chubb, Stephanie Castro
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Patent number: 7867639Abstract: An alpha voltaic battery includes at least one layer of a semiconductor material comprising at least one p/n junction, at least one absorption and conversion layer on the at least one layer of semiconductor layer, and at least one alpha particle emitter. The absorption and conversion layer prevents at least a portion of alpha particles from the alpha particle emitter from damaging the p/n junction in the layer of semiconductor material. The absorption and conversion layer also converts at least a portion of energy from the alpha particles into electron-hole pairs for collection by the one p/n junction in the layer of semiconductor material.Type: GrantFiled: March 29, 2005Date of Patent: January 11, 2011Assignees: Rochester Institute of Technology, The United States of America as represented by the Administrator of National Aeronautics and Space AdministrationInventors: Ryne P. Raffaelle, Phillip Jenkins, David Wilt, David Scheiman, Donald Chubb, Stephanie Castro
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Patent number: 7718283Abstract: An alpha voltaic battery includes at least one layer of a semiconductor material comprising at least one p/n junction, at least one absorption and conversion layer on the at least one layer of semiconductor layer, and at least one alpha particle emitter. The absorption and conversion layer prevents at least a portion of alpha particles from the alpha particle emitter from damaging the p/n junction in the layer of semiconductor material. The absorption and conversion layer also converts at least a portion of energy from the alpha particles into electron-hole pairs for collection by the one p/n junction in the layer of semiconductor material.Type: GrantFiled: August 22, 2008Date of Patent: May 18, 2010Assignees: Rochester Institute of Technology, Glenn Research Center, Ohio Aerospace InstituteInventors: Ryne P. Raffaelle, Phillip Jenkins, David Wilt, David Scheiman, Donald Chubb, Stephanie Castro
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Publication number: 20080318357Abstract: An alpha voltaic battery includes at least one layer of a semiconductor material comprising at least one p/n junction, at least one absorption and conversion layer on the at least one layer of semiconductor layer, and at least one alpha particle emitter. The absorption and conversion layer prevents at least a portion of alpha particles from the alpha particle emitter from damaging the p/n junction in the layer of semiconductor material. The absorption and conversion layer also converts at least a portion of energy from the alpha particles into electron-hole pairs for collection by the one p/n junction in the layer of semiconductor material.Type: ApplicationFiled: August 22, 2008Publication date: December 25, 2008Applicants: ROCHESTER INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY, GLENN RESEARCH CENTER, OHIO AEROSPACE INSTITUTEInventors: Ryne P. Raffaelle, Phillip Jenkins, David Wilt, David Scheiman, Donald Chubb, Stephanie Castro
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Patent number: D619776Type: GrantFiled: April 29, 2009Date of Patent: July 20, 2010Assignee: Mars, IncorporatedInventors: Susan Wilson, Lauren Brooking, Phillip Jenkins, Robert Wheatcroft
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Patent number: D634508Type: GrantFiled: May 4, 2010Date of Patent: March 22, 2011Assignee: Mars, IncorporatedInventors: Susan Wilson, Lauren Brooking, Phillip Jenkins, Robert Wheatcroft