Patents by Inventor Timothy Allan Stemwedel

Timothy Allan Stemwedel 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: 20090173122
    Abstract: The invention is a soluble, liquid or dry fertilizer for application to a plant or soil that is grown or farmed as “organic” as defined under the USDA National Organic Program Rule. The fertilizer is produced from distiller's yeast from beer and/or alcohol production. The yeast cells are autolyzed using heat and the autolysates are separated by centrifugation into insoluble cell walls and cellular plasma. The plasma is concentrated by evaporation into the fertilizer. The fertilizer may be further processed by proteolytic enzyme (protease) hydrolysis to produce smaller-sized, soluble, Nitrogen-containing compounds including protein, peptides, amino acids, amines and ammonia. The fertilizer has a solids content between ten and sixty-five percent, a total protein content of at least ten percent and up to eighty-five percent, a total Nitrogen content between one and fourteen percent, and a pH between 2.5 and 10.
    Type: Application
    Filed: January 4, 2008
    Publication date: July 9, 2009
    Inventor: Timothy Allan Stemwedel
  • Publication number: 20080302151
    Abstract: The invention is a water-soluble, liquid or dry fertilizer for application to a plant or soil that is grown or farmed as “organic” as defined under the USDA National Organic Program Rule. The fertilizer is produced from soybean meal using protolytic enzyme (protease) hydrolysis to produce water-soluble, Nitrogen-containing compounds including protein, peptides, amino acids, amines and ammonia. The fertilizer also contains other essential plant nutrients including Calcium, Phosphorus, Sulfur and Potassium. The fertilizer has solids content between ten and fifty-five percent, and a total Nitrogen content between 1.0 percent and 10 percent.
    Type: Application
    Filed: June 11, 2007
    Publication date: December 11, 2008
    Inventor: Timothy Allan Stemwedel