Patents by Inventor Waldemar Weinberg
Waldemar Weinberg 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).
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Patent number: 6821628Abstract: The cooking panel is made from an opaque glass-ceramic material uniformly colored throughout and having keatite mixed crystals as the predominant crystalline phase. The cooking panel is made by ceramicizing a ceramicizable glass or a transparent glass-ceramic with high quartz mixed crystals as the predominant crystalline phase in a definite color location range with a brightness parameter value (L*) less than 85 and a color shade and chromaticity according to its later service and wear pattern. The cooking panel makes deposited material, such as dirt and the like, less conspicuous.Type: GrantFiled: December 9, 1999Date of Patent: November 23, 2004Assignee: Schott GlasInventors: Bernd Schultheis, Waldemar Weinberg, Monica Cotlear De Witzmann, Roland Dudek, Friedrich Siebers, Klaus Schoenberger
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Patent number: 6673504Abstract: A method for applying a coating to a surface of a material while using electrophotography. According to this invention, a supporting material provided with a photoconductive layer has an electrostatic charge pattern, a coating material is applied to the supporting material with the aid of electrostatic forces, and the coating material is applied to the subject to be coated. In order to produce high-quality surface coatings, according to this invention, at least the duromer constituents including a resin and a hardener are applied, together or in succession, as a coating material to the supporting material.Type: GrantFiled: April 26, 2002Date of Patent: January 6, 2004Inventors: Michael Zimmer, Horst Stedron, Waldemar Weinberg
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Patent number: 6524641Abstract: A method for producing a fired decoration with an essentially defect-free visual appearance on substrates made of glass, glass-ceramic, ceramic, or other substances with other decorative colors consisting of base enamel, pigments, and additives, whereby as additives, UV-sensitive optical whitening agents, in particular thiophene-benzoxazol derivatives, are added to the decorative color.Type: GrantFiled: March 21, 2000Date of Patent: February 25, 2003Assignee: Schott GlasInventors: Monica Cotlear de Witzmann, Petra Auchter-Krummel, Waldemar Weinberg, Dave Campbell
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Patent number: 6487386Abstract: The device for applying decorations and characters on glass, glass ceramic or ceramic products includes an image roller (5) provided with an electrostatically chargeable photoconductive layer; a photo-exposure assembly (6) for generating an electrostatic charge image corresponding to at least one of decorations and characters to be applied; a supply container (8) for a toner with a device (8a) for developing the electrostatic charge image with the toner; a dimensionally stable transfer roller (7) for receiving the toner image, which is in direct contact with the image roller on one side and with the product (2) on its other side; at least two coronas (9, 10) including a first corona (9) arranged on the transfer roller (7) and a second corona (10) arranged under the product near the transfer roller (7) and a heater for burning the toner image onto the product, after electrostatically transferring the toner image to the product by means of the coronas.Type: GrantFiled: June 18, 2001Date of Patent: November 26, 2002Assignee: Schott GlasInventors: Michael Zimmer, Waldemar Weinberg, Petra Auchter-Krummel, Dieter Jung
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Publication number: 20020058117Abstract: The cooking panel is made from an opaque glass-ceramic material uniformly colored throughout and having keatite mixed crystals as the predominant crystalline phase, which is ceramicized with a ceramicizable glass or a transparent glass-ceramic with high quartz mixed crystals as the predominant crystalline phase in a definite color location range according to its later service and wear pattern. The cooking panel makes deposited material, such as dirt and the like, less conspicuous.Type: ApplicationFiled: December 9, 1999Publication date: May 16, 2002Inventors: BERND SCHULTHEIS, WALDEMAR WEINBERG, MONICA COTLEAR DE WITZMANN, ROLAND DUDEK, FRIEDRICH SIEBERS, KLAUS SCHOENBERGER
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Patent number: 6300030Abstract: The method of making a design and/or sign on glass, glass-ceramic and ceramic articles using a transfer agent includes providing a band-shaped carrier coated with a transfer agent; periodically advancing the band-shaped carrier coated with the transfer agent past a printing station; periodically printing the design and/or sign to be applied on the transfer-agent-coated band-shaped carrier with a heat-resistant toner to form respective printed toner images in succession on the band-shaped carrier in the printing station and registering reliably and periodically transferring the respective printed toner images to corresponding glass, glass-ceramic or ceramic articles by releasing the transfer agent from the band-shaped carrier.Type: GrantFiled: May 9, 2000Date of Patent: October 9, 2001Inventors: Waldemar Weinberg, Michael Zimmer
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Patent number: 6187429Abstract: For obtaining firmly adhering decorative layers of ceramic colors applied to glass or glass ceramic substrates, prior to stoving, optically inactive inorganic substances, e.g., mica, which are chemically inert with respect to the base enamel and the pigments are added to the base enamel together with the pigments in fine-particle form, e.g., 20-40 &mgr;m, in a quantity of 1-20 wt. %.Type: GrantFiled: November 28, 1994Date of Patent: February 13, 2001Assignee: Schott GlasswerkeInventors: Waldemar Weinberg, Herwig Scheidler
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Patent number: 6043171Abstract: The lead- and cadmium-free glass composition for glazing, enameling and decorating glass or glass-ceramic articles contains high quartz and/or keatite solid solution crystals as principal crystalline phases after crystallization and a low thermal expansion coefficient of less than 2.times.10.sup.-6 /K at temperatures between 20 and 700.degree. C. This glass composition contains Li.sub.2 O, 0 to 5% by weight; Na.sub.2 O, 0 to 5% by weight; K.sub.2 O, less than 2% by weight; MgO, 0 to 3% by weight; CaO, 0 to 4% by weight; SrO, 0 to 4% by weight; BaO, 0 to 4% by weight; ZnO, 0 to 4% by weight; B.sub.2 O.sub.3, 15 to 27% by weight; Al.sub.2 O.sub.3, 10 to 20% by weight; SiO.sub.2, 43 to 58% by weight; TiO.sub.2, 0 to 3% by weight and ZrO.sub.2, 0 to 4% by weight, Sb.sub.2 O.sub.3, 0 to 2% by weight; F, 0 to 3% by weight in exchange for oxygen and up to 30% by weight of at least one inorganic pigment resistant to a burning-in temperature on the glass or the glass-ceramics. The sum total amount of Li.sub.2 O, Na.Type: GrantFiled: May 19, 1998Date of Patent: March 28, 2000Assignee: Schott GlasInventors: Friedrich Siebers, Ottmar Becker, Waldemar Weinberg, Petra Auchter-Krummel
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Patent number: 5922271Abstract: A method for the manufacture of dense-sintered glass-ceramic shaped objects which have a coefficient of thermal expansion, .alpha., of -0.5.times.10.sup.-6 /K to 1.8.times.10.sup.-6 /K in the range between 20.degree. C. and 700.degree. C. whereby ceramizable glass powder and/or glass-ceramic powder from the system Li.sub.2 O-Al.sub.2 O.sub.3 -SiO.sub.2 is slip-cast by means of porous molds, dried, pretempered if necessary at temperatures up to 600.degree. C., vitrified and then sintered until the sintering temperature is reached up to relative densities of greater than 0.96 and ceramized, and whereby the glass powder and/or the glass ceramic-powder is prepared in a first grain size fraction of less than 63 .mu.m, in particular less than 45 .mu.m, and in a second grain size fraction of less than 7 .mu.m, in a ratio of the fractions to one another between 2:1 and 4:1, to form a stable, pourable slurry.Type: GrantFiled: June 4, 1997Date of Patent: July 13, 1999Assignee: Schott GlaswerkeInventors: Wolfgang Semar, Janusz Zborowski, Wolfgang Pannhorst, Waldemar Weinberg, Klaus Mirsch, Michael Dunkl, Bartolome Aloy, Werner Waidhas, Monika Burkner
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Patent number: 5837025Abstract: The invention is directed to a method for producing low sintering fine-particle multicomponent glass powder having a particle size of the primary particle in the nanometer range. The method utilizes microemulsion techniques with subsequent separation of the particles out of the emulsion and calcination for utilization as glass flow having a sintering temperature <900.degree. C. or in a glass flow, for generating thin transparent layers or for generating color decorations on glass, glass ceramic or ceramic substrates after adding a coloring pigment to the glass flow. The microemulsion for producing the nanoscale glass powder particles is generated from a nonionic ambiphilic emulsifier with a component of 10 to 15 percent by weight on the emulsion, from an oil phase having a portion of 50 to 70 percent by weight and a glass precursor-containing aqueous salt solution having a portion of up to 31.3 percent by weight with salt contents of up to 45 percent by weight.Type: GrantFiled: June 3, 1996Date of Patent: November 17, 1998Assignee: Schott GlaswerkeInventors: Petra Auchter-Krummel, Waldemar Weinberg, Christoph Lesniak, Rudiger Nass, Helmut Schmidt, Nanning Arfsten
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Patent number: 5723220Abstract: For removing halo formation, which often occurs on glass-ceramic articles decorated with a ceramic color, a layer of SiO.sub.2 is applied to the glass-ceramic article after the glass-ceramic color has been burnt-in. The layer is preferably 40-200 nm thick. The layer can contain up to 66.5% by weight of oxides, which change the refractive index so that the layer is invisible, the layer being, for example, 85-93% by weight of SiO.sub.2 and 7-15% by weight of TiO.sub.2.Type: GrantFiled: August 29, 1995Date of Patent: March 3, 1998Assignee: Schott GlaswerkeInventors: Roland Leroux, Erich Rodek, Kurt Schaupert, Jurgen Thurk, Waldemar Weinberg
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Patent number: 5716712Abstract: A glass-ceramic article decorated with ceramic colorings has a first coloration layer over which at least a second coloration layer is arranged. The second coloration layer at least partially overlaps the first coloration layer. The first coloration layer can be applied as a base decor over a large area and be finely distributed on the surface of the glass-ceramic article. The base decor, for example, also protects the surface of the glass-ceramic article against scratches. The second coloration layer is colored differently and, as a marking decor, defines, for example, the cooking zones and facilitates the confusion-free recognition of the thereby individualized color function areas.Type: GrantFiled: July 20, 1995Date of Patent: February 10, 1998Assignee: Schott GlaswerkeInventors: Dieter Schonig, Dietmar Wennemann, Waldemar Weinberg, Monica Cotlear de Witzmann
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Patent number: 5500255Abstract: For removing halo formation, which often occurs on glass-ceramic articles decorated with a ceramic color, a layer of SiO.sub.2 is applied to the glass-ceramic article after the glass-ceramic color has been burnt-in. The layer is preferably 40-200 nm thick. The layer can contain up to 66.5% by weight of oxides, which change the refractive index so that the layer is invisible, the layer being, for example, 85-93% by weight of SiO.sub.2 and 7-15% by weight of TiO.sub.2.Type: GrantFiled: January 11, 1993Date of Patent: March 19, 1996Assignee: Schott GlaswerkeInventors: Roland Leroux, Erich Rodek, Kurt Schaupert, Jurgen Thurk, Waldemar Weinberg
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Patent number: 5484467Abstract: Process for the production of decorative glass ceramic articles, the design being sunk entirely or partially into the surface of the glass ceramic, wherein the surface, to be decorated, of the not-yet ceramed base glass is connected as the anode of the region of its glass transition temperature Tg up to Tg+100.degree. C. and a current is allowed to flow evoking an alteration of the surface of the base glass, and wherein the current is permitted to flow until the surface has been altered to a desired depth.Type: GrantFiled: August 16, 1993Date of Patent: January 16, 1996Assignee: Schott GlaswerkeInventors: Peter Nass, Otmar Becker, Klaus Kristen, Waldemar Weinberg, Manfred Borens, Roland Leroux, Jurgen Thurk
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Patent number: 5409742Abstract: Large area decorations of glazings, ceramic paint or the like on glass ceramic, glass, ceramic or similar meltable substrates, in particular on glass ceramic cooking plates, are applied by the new method by means of a laser beam which is widened linearly over the entire width of the area to be decorated, as it were in a zone melting method. The linear energy supply zone is advanced at a speed high enough for essentially only the decorating material to be melted on or burnt in but ensuring that the thermal conduction front does not move appreciably into the substrate material.Type: GrantFiled: December 27, 1993Date of Patent: April 25, 1995Assignee: Schott GlaswerkeInventors: Nanning Arfsten, Klaus Kristen, Erich Rodek, Herwig Scheidler, Waldemar Weinberg