Patents by Inventor Steven J. Paley

Steven J. Paley 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: 6062381
    Abstract: A cleaning kit for use in cleaning surfaces in clean rooms, semiconductor fabrication plants, pharmaceutical manufacturing facilities, etc. A stack of extremely clean wipers is packaged together with a container of cleaning fluid in a liquid-tight outer container. The kit is stored until just before it is to be used. Fluid is released from the inner container into the wipers. In one embodiment, the inner container is frangible and is broken by application of hand pressure to the outside of the outer container. The cleaning liquid is allowed to soak into the wipers, and the wipers are removed from the outer container for use. The container can be resealed to protect the wipers after the package has been opened. This device and method minimize deterioration of the wiper material due to prolonged contact with the cleaning fluid, and minimize the loss of effectiveness of substances such as biocides which might deteriorate due to prolonged contact with the wiper material.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: March 2, 1998
    Date of Patent: May 16, 2000
    Assignee: The Texwipe Company LLC
    Inventors: William R. Paley, Steven J. Paley, Douglas W. Cooper, Peter B. Russo, Jeffrey C. Sayre, Howard D. Siegerman
  • Patent number: 6001187
    Abstract: A cleaning kit for use in cleaning surfaces in clean rooms, semiconductor fabrication plants, pharmaceutical manufacturing facilities, etc. A stack of extremely clean wipers is packaged together with a container of cleaning fluid in a liquid-tight outer container. The kit is stored until just before it is to be used. Fluid is released from the inner container into the wipers. In one embodiment, the inner container is frangible and is broken by application of hand pressure to the outside of the outer container. The cleaning liquid is allowed to soak into the wipers, and the wipers are removed from the outer container for use. The container can be resealed to protect the wipers after the package has been opened. This device and method minimize deterioration of the wiper material due to prolonged contact with the cleaning fluid, and minimize the loss of effectiveness of substances such as biocides which might deteriorate due to prolonged contact with the wiper material.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: February 24, 1997
    Date of Patent: December 14, 1999
    Assignee: The Texwipe Company LLC
    Inventors: William R. Paley, Steven J. Paley, Douglas W. Cooper, Peter B. Russo, Jeffrey C. Sayre, Howard D. Siegerman
  • Patent number: 5988371
    Abstract: A cleaning kit for use in cleaning surfaces in clean rooms, semiconductor fabrication plants, pharmaceutical manufacturing facilities, etc. A stack of extremely clean wipers is packaged together with a container of cleaning fluid in a liquid-tight outer container. The outer container is vacuum-sealed. The kit is stored until just before it is to be used. Fluid is released from the inner container into the wipers, preferably by the use of a puncturing device operable to puncture one of the walls of the inner container by the application of pressure in a limited area on the outside of the outer container. The cleaning liquid is allowed to soak into the wipers, and the wipers are removed from the outer container for use.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: March 2, 1998
    Date of Patent: November 23, 1999
    Assignee: The Texwipe Company LLC
    Inventors: William R. Paley, Steven J. Paley, Douglas W. Cooper, Peter B. Russo, Jeffrey C. Sayre, Howard D. Siegerman, Robert Amabile
  • Patent number: 5814159
    Abstract: A cleaning kit for use in cleaning surfaces in clean rooms, semiconductor fabrication plants, pharmaceutical manufacturing facilities, etc. A stack of extremely clean wipers is packaged together with a container of cleaning fluid in a liquid-tight outer container. The outer container is vacuum-sealed. The kit is stored until just before it is to be used. Fluid is released from the inner container into the wipers, preferably by means of a puncturing device operable to puncture one of the walls of the inner container by the application of pressure in a limited area on the outside of the outer container. The cleaning liquid is allowed to soak into the wipers, and the wipers are removed from the outer container for use. The container can be resealed to protect the wipers after the package has been opened. The puncturing device is located away from the edges of the package to minimize the chances of accidental puncture.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: February 24, 1997
    Date of Patent: September 29, 1998
    Assignee: The Texwipe Company LLC
    Inventors: William R. Paley, Steven J. Paley, Douglas W. Cooper, Peter B. Russo, Jeffrey C. Sayre, Howard D. Siegerman, Robert N. Amabile
  • Patent number: 5271995
    Abstract: An article of manufacture, such as a wiper, especially suited for use in a controlled environment, such as a cleanroom environment, and a method for controlling the entry of deleterious particles into the controlled environment, within which environment a process is carried out, the article being constructed of fibers of a synthetic polymeric material of the type including only constituents which are relatively benign in that the included constituents will be less likely to have a deleterious effect upon the process carried out in the controlled environment or upon the product of that process, the method including constructing the article of such fibers, the preferred synthetic polymeric materials including no more than only negligible amounts of inorganic constituents or metallic constituents, one such preferred synthetic polymeric material being nylon bright.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: February 23, 1990
    Date of Patent: December 21, 1993
    Assignee: The Texwipe Company
    Inventors: Edward Paley, Steven J. Paley, Charles F. Mattina
  • Patent number: 5227844
    Abstract: The feed surfaces of feed rollers along the paper path of an imaging machine are cleaned by passing a cleaning sheet along the paper path through the imaging machine, the cleaning sheet including a substrate carrying a coating of synthetic polymeric material in a pattern which assures contact between the coating and the feed surfaces to be cleaned, the material of the coating having a tack which enables the coating to pick off particles of unwanted material from the feed surfaces and capture the picked-off particles for movement with the cleaning sheet along the paper path and out of the machine.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 3, 1991
    Date of Patent: July 13, 1993
    Assignee: The Texwipe Company
    Inventors: Himangshu R. Bhattacharjee, Edward Paley, Steven J. Paley, Vincent C. Caputo, Arthur Jacob
  • Patent number: 4888229
    Abstract: A method and a wiper for reducing particulate contamination which otherwise might result from the use of the wiper in a controlled environment, such as that maintained in a cleanroom, the wiper being of the type constructed at least partially from a thermoplastic fabric material by severing the wiper along peripheral edges thereof from a sheet of such material having indeterminate dimensions, the method and the wiper providing a fused border in the material along the peripheral edges of the wiper and extending inwardly into the wiper a distance great enough to provide the fused border with sufficient area and sufficient tear-strength to maintain therein segments of the material of the wiper which otherwise might be released from the peripheral edges of the wiper during use of the wiper, yet small enough to maintain pliability and absorbency in the wiper for wiping procedures.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: April 8, 1988
    Date of Patent: December 19, 1989
    Assignee: The Texwipe Company
    Inventors: Steven J. Paley, Clifford A. Eberhardt, Edward Paley
  • Patent number: 4725694
    Abstract: A computer terminal device includes a flat screen display element and a touch-sensitive element. Simulated keyboards can be displayed on the display element and, in response to the touching of the simulated keys, generate appropriate control signals. The same flat screen display can also be used to display computer output, either the result of calculations or the result of information retrieval requests. The slim silhouette of this terminal makes it ideal for hostile environments such as the factory floor or the hospital room.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: May 13, 1986
    Date of Patent: February 16, 1988
    Assignee: American Telephone and Telegraph Company, AT&T Bell Laboratories
    Inventors: Carol M. Auer, Daniel L. Castagno, Allen W. Haley, Jr., Harry H. Moore, IV, Sean E. O'Leary, Steven J. Paley, Thomas E. Rutt
  • Patent number: RE38419
    Abstract: A computer terminal device includes a flat screen display element and a touch-sensitive element. Simulated keyboards can be displayed on the display element and, in response to the touching of the simulated keys, generate appropriate control signals. The same flat screen display can also be used to display computer output, either the result of calculations or the result of information retrieval requests. The slim silhouette of this terminal makes it ideal for hostile environments such as the factory floor or the hospital room.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: March 15, 2001
    Date of Patent: February 10, 2004
    Assignee: NCR Corporation
    Inventors: Carol M. Auer, Daniel L. Castagno, Allen W. Haley, Jr., Harry J. Moore, IV, Sean E. O'Leary, Steven J. Paley, Thomas E. Rutt
  • Patent number: D303111
    Type: Grant
    Filed: November 18, 1985
    Date of Patent: August 29, 1989
    Assignee: American Telephone and Telegraph Company, AT&T Bell Laboratories
    Inventor: Steven J. Paley