Patents by Inventor Terry L. Wolfe
Terry L. Wolfe 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: 6077447Abstract: A device for producing fibrinogen includes a platen having a surface configured for heat exchange with a container, which is adhered to the platen by device of a vacuum and heat exchange allowing both cooling and heating to occur along the boundary between the container and the platen. The platen is operatively coupled to a device of rocking the platen about a horizontal axis and the container allows scavenging of a cryoprecipitate fibrinogen from the blood product for subsequent utilization.Type: GrantFiled: January 22, 1999Date of Patent: June 20, 2000Assignee: ThermoGenesis Corp.Inventors: Philip H. Coelho, Terry L. Wolf, Curtis D. Mau, Jeffery D. Arnett, Richard F. Huyser
-
Patent number: 5975367Abstract: A fibrin glue dispenser including a spring biased rack. The rack spring is a coil spring having substantially linear characteristics along its operating length. The rack spring forces first and second plungers into first and second loaded syringes to dispense thrombin and fibrinogen into first and second exits such that the admixture of the two occurs for forming fibrin glue away from the exists. A dispensing lever can be controlled as to the fibrin glue formation to dispense either drops of fibrin glue or an elongate line of fibrin glue.Type: GrantFiled: September 27, 1996Date of Patent: November 2, 1999Assignee: ThermoGenesis Corp.Inventors: Philip H. Coelho, Terry L. Wolf, Pete J. Menke, Jerry M. Alcone
-
Patent number: 5759171Abstract: A sprayer for dispensing fibrinogen and thrombin to form fibrin glue immediately away from the sprayer to prevent clogging and insure accurate precise metering. The sprayer includes a pistol grip area, a barrel and a trigger which moves a plunger support that captures the plunger of a syringe. One syringe holds thrombin and the other syringe holds fibrinogen. Each syringe communicates with an outlet having an atomizer.Type: GrantFiled: September 27, 1996Date of Patent: June 2, 1998Assignee: ThermoGenesis Corp.Inventors: Philip H. Coelho, Terry L. Wolf, Peter Menke, Jerry M. Alcone
-
Patent number: 5414240Abstract: An electrically heatable windshield with a hidden bus bar configuration. A border of opaque ceramic material, preferably a lead borosilicate enamel, is bonded to an interior surface of the transparency about its periphery. Opposing electroconductive bus bars, preferably a low frit content silver-containing ceramic material, are bonded to the ceramic material so that the entire inner edge of the bus bar overlays a portion of the ceramic material and is spaced from the inner edge of the border, providing an intermediate portion of the border between the bus bars and transparency surface that is not covered by the bus bars. An electro-conductive coating is applied to the transparency to interconnect the bus bars and covers to the inner surface of the transparency, the bus bars and the intermediate portion of the ceramic material border so that electric current flowing between the bus bars must flow through the portion of the coating that covers the intermediate portion of the border.Type: GrantFiled: December 27, 1988Date of Patent: May 9, 1995Assignee: PPG Industries, Inc.Inventors: Thomas M. Carter, Charles R. Coleman, Russell C. Criss, Frank H. Gillery, Pamela L. Martino, Amy M. Roginski, John A. Winter, Terry L. Wolfe, James J. Finley
-
Patent number: 4954153Abstract: Thermal energy from quartz lamp heaters are used to fire ceramic enamel material onto a glass substrate while minimizing any increase in the temperature of the glass.Type: GrantFiled: July 3, 1989Date of Patent: September 4, 1990Assignee: PPG Industries, Inc.Inventors: Charles R. Coleman, Terry L. Wolfe, John A. Winter, Elizabeth A. Fiano
-
Patent number: 4904294Abstract: A heat softened glass sheet is conveyed directly from a heating furnace onto an advancing conveyor belt which is supported on a scissor table. The glass sheet is advanced on the belt to a position below an upper press face. The scissor table increases the sag of the belt and the corresponding curved configuration of the supported glass sheet as it lifts the glass sheet into pressing engagement with the upper press face. During pressing, the glass sheet and belt generally conform to the shaping surface of the press face.Type: GrantFiled: December 22, 1988Date of Patent: February 27, 1990Assignee: PPG Industries, INc.Inventors: Stephen J. Schultz, Terry L. Wolfe, Richard E. Wilhelm
-
Patent number: 4381933Abstract: This invention relates to shaping glass sheets by roll forming to either simple or complex curvatures about a single axis of bending or to compound curvatures comprising components of curvature about mutually perpendicular axes of bending by a controlled, repeatable program of roll forming without causing the glass sheets to stop their forward movement during their shaping. The apparatus used to perform this process has a minimum of moving parts, thus minimizing maintenance problems and reducing downtime for maintenance and repair.Type: GrantFiled: January 25, 1982Date of Patent: May 3, 1983Assignee: PPG Industries, Inc.Inventors: Stephen J. Schultz, Terry L. Wolfe
-
Patent number: 4311509Abstract: A conveyor roll for conveying glass sheets and a conveyor comprising a plurality of said conveyor rolls is described. Each conveyor roll comprises a curved shaft conforming to the shape of said glass sheets transverse to their path of movement, a plurality of hubs of essentially cylindrical configuration mounted around said curved shaft and having loosely interfitting tongues and grooves and a cylindrically shaped collar of a material that does not mar glass in tightly fitting relation about each of said hubs. When torque is applied to one of the end hubs of said conveyor rolls, the glass engaging surfaces of said collars rotate in unison at a uniform peripheral speed to convey the curved glass sheets through a cooling area included in glass sheet tempering apparatus with minimum scuff marks because the different collar surfaces rotate at the same rotational speed against the engaged surfaces of said curved glass sheets.Type: GrantFiled: September 26, 1980Date of Patent: January 19, 1982Assignee: PPG Industries, Inc.Inventors: William D. Reader, Terry L. Wolfe
-
Patent number: 4274857Abstract: Applying a boron nitride composition to a flexible fiber glass fabric cover for a press bending mold for shaping heat-softened glass sheets having a portion painted with a composition consisting essentially of a finely divided frit-pigment mixture by impregnating at least the portion of the cover that engages the painted portion of the glass sheet reduces the likelihood of marking the press bent glass sheet in unwanted regions. In addition, such impregnation facilitates removing the press bending molds from the press bent glass sheet when the press bending molds are separated after engaging the heat-softened glass sheet.Type: GrantFiled: November 2, 1979Date of Patent: June 23, 1981Assignee: PPG Industries, Inc.Inventor: Terry L. Wolfe
-
Patent number: 4139359Abstract: Heat-softened glass sheets are shaped to either simple or compound bends while being continuously conveyed by means of forming rolls having transverse curvature, wherein, in at least the first portion of the bending station, the force of gravity alone causes the glass sheets to sag into substantial conformity with the transverse curvature of the forming rolls. Support for each glass sheet is gradually transferred from straight conveyor rolls to curved forming rolls without vertically reciprocating the rolls. Optionally, at the exit end of the forming station, a set of upper forming rolls having transverse curvature complementary to that of the lower forming rolls may be provided to assure close conformance to the desired curvature. Compound bends may be formed by providing the path defined by the lower forming rolls with a concave curvature in the direction of glass travel.Type: GrantFiled: November 2, 1977Date of Patent: February 13, 1979Assignee: PPG Industries, Inc.Inventors: Randall S. Johnson, Terry L. Wolfe