Patents by Inventor Richard T. Davis

Richard T. Davis 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: 7935261
    Abstract: A method is provided of recycling and cleaning up oil-based waste drilling mud and cuttings contaminated with oil-based waste drilling mud. A facility for performing the method is also provided. The method includes removing the coarse solids from the mud, breaking the emulsion, separating the hydrophobic phase from the water phase and the solid phase, vaporizing all residual oil and water from the solids, and burning off the vaporized oil. The method produces a solid “soil” product that is free from oil contamination, an oil product that is fit for reuse, and clean air emissions. A thermal desorber can be used to efficiently vaporize the oil at low temperature. Optionally the water fraction of the mud can be vaporized, solutes and salts can be captured as evaporite and then be mixed with the soil product. The method has the unique advantage of producing no persistent hazardous waste.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: November 24, 2008
    Date of Patent: May 3, 2011
    Assignee: Arkansas Reclamation Company, LLC
    Inventors: Thomas P. Jones, Richard T. Davis, Charles R. Richesin
  • Patent number: 7867399
    Abstract: A method is provided of recycling and decontaminating oil-based waste drilling mud and cuttings contaminated with oil-based waste drilling mud. A facility for performing the method is also provided. The method includes removing the coarse solids from the mud, breaking the emulsion, and separating the hydrophobic phase from the water phase and the solid phase. The solids may then be treated by either or both of two approaches. One approach involves vaporizing all residual oil and water from the solids, and burning off the vaporized oil. Another approach involves at least partially vaporizing the residual oil from the solids and recondensing the oil. The method produces a solid “soil” product that is free from oil contamination (or is sufficiently decontaminated to allow reuse), an oil product that is fit for reuse, and clean air emissions. A thermal desorber or a soil dryer can be used to efficiently vaporize the oil at low temperature.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 30, 2009
    Date of Patent: January 11, 2011
    Assignee: Arkansas Reclamation Company, LLC
    Inventors: Thomas P. Jones, Charles R. Richesin, Richard T. Davis
  • Publication number: 20100326655
    Abstract: A method is provided of recycling and decontaminating oil-based waste drilling mud and cuttings contaminated with oil-based waste drilling mud. A facility for performing the method is also provided. The method includes vaporizing all residual oil and water from mud solids, and recondensing the oil. The mud may be the subject of additional treatment steps before or after the vaporization step (or both before and after the vaporization step). The method produces a solid “soil” product that is free from oil contamination (or is sufficiently decontaminated to allow reuse), an oil product that is fit for reuse, and clean air emissions. A thermal desorber or a soil dryer can be used to efficiently vaporize the oil at low temperature. Optionally the water fraction of the mud can be vaporized, solutes and salts can be captured as evaporite and then be mixed with the soil product. The method has the unique advantage of producing no persistent hazardous waste.
    Type: Application
    Filed: September 2, 2010
    Publication date: December 30, 2010
    Applicant: ARKANSAS RECLAMATION CO., LLC
    Inventors: Thomas P. Jones, Charles R. Richesin, Richard T. Davis
  • Publication number: 20100130387
    Abstract: A method is provided of recycling and decontaminating oil-based waste drilling mud and cuttings contaminated with oil-based waste drilling mud. A facility for performing the method is also provided. The method includes removing the coarse solids from the mud, breaking the emulsion, and separating the hydrophobic phase from the water phase and the solid phase. The solids may then be treated by either or both of two approaches. One approach involves vaporizing all residual oil and water from the solids, and burning off the vaporized oil. Another approach involves at least partially vaporizing the residual oil from the solids and recondensing the oil. The method produces a solid “soil” product that is free from oil contamination (or is sufficiently decontaminated to allow reuse), an oil product that is fit for reuse, and clean air emissions. A thermal desorber or a soil dryer can be used to efficiently vaporize the oil at low temperature.
    Type: Application
    Filed: October 30, 2009
    Publication date: May 27, 2010
    Applicant: ARKANSAS RECLAMATION CO., LLC
    Inventors: Richard T. Davis, Thomas P. Jones, Charles R. Richesin
  • Publication number: 20030233328
    Abstract: A computer network includes a user computer connected to a communications network, an encryption/decryption device connected to the user computer, a plurality of authentication servers connected to the communications network, an authentication server selector that determines a near authentication server for the user computer from the plurality of authentication servers, wherein the user computer is connected to the near authentication server through the communication network. In a system including a first and second computing device which each store the same series of at least one value and each store a plurality of encrypting and decrypting processes, the first computing device establishing an encrypted communications session with the second computing device using at least one of the plurality of encrypting and decrypting processes selected from the plurality of encryption and decryption processes.
    Type: Application
    Filed: April 23, 2003
    Publication date: December 18, 2003
    Inventors: David A. Scott, Mark D. Walsh, Richard T. Davis, Patrick Tinklenberg