Patents by Inventor Richard Ellis Strube

Richard Ellis Strube 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: 20100013335
    Abstract: The invention is directed to the method of utilizing unbalanced non-equilibrium magnetic fields to induce a rotational motion in a rotor, the rotor moves with respect to the armature and stator. The invention, a three (3) tier device (armature, rotor, and stator) has the armature and stator being fixed in position with the rotor allowed to move freely between the armature and stator. To induce a rotational motion, the rotor, in its concave side uses unbalanced non-equilibrium magnetic fields created by having multiple magnets held in a fixed position by ferritic or like materials to act upon the magnets imbedded in the armature. The rotor, in its convex side has additional unbalanced non-equilibrium magnets and additional pole pair magnets to create a magnetic flux that moves with the moving fixed position fields to cut across closely bonded coils of wire in the stator to induce a voltage and current that is used to generate electrical power.
    Type: Application
    Filed: July 20, 2008
    Publication date: January 21, 2010
    Inventor: Richard Ellis Strube
  • Publication number: 20080300499
    Abstract: This invention relates to non-invasive monitoring devices, in monitoring minute movements made by the body to report the presence or absence of respiration and normal heart rate. The movements being measured are the pulsations made by the normal operation of both the heart and lungs. This is accomplished by converting the body movements into electrical signals with an adapted polymorph-piezoelectric transducer. The electrical signal that is detected is a mixed signal, a signal composed of a lower frequency (breathing contraction) and the higher frequency (heart pulse). The signals are detected by separating the body motions by an adaptive filter that has a break frequency at twice the frequency of the larger body movement signal (breathing contraction). The separate body movement signals operate with associated logic circuitry to allow each signal to be independently measured, recorded, and acted upon to determine if the individual (patient) is undergoing a life threatening experience.
    Type: Application
    Filed: May 19, 2008
    Publication date: December 4, 2008
    Inventor: Richard Ellis Strube