ARDICA TECHNOLOGIES INC has a total of 28 patent applications. Its first patent ever was published in 2005. It filed its patents most often in United States, WIPO (World Intellectual Property Organization) and EPO (European Patent Office). Its main competitors in its focus markets environmental technology, electrical machinery and energy and medical technology are EZELLERON GMBH, UNIENERGY TECH LLC and HYTEON INC.
# | Country | Total Patents | |
---|---|---|---|
#1 | United States | 9 | |
#2 | WIPO (World Intellectual Property Organization) | 9 | |
#3 | EPO (European Patent Office) | 5 | |
#4 | Canada | 2 | |
#5 | China | 2 | |
#6 | Republic of Korea | 1 |
# | Industry | |
---|---|---|
#1 | Environmental technology | |
#2 | Electrical machinery and energy | |
#3 | Medical technology | |
#4 | Materials and metallurgy | |
#5 | Engines, pumps and turbines | |
#6 | Machines | |
#7 | Chemical engineering |
# | Name | Total Patents |
---|---|---|
#1 | Braithwaite Daniel | 17 |
#2 | Fisher Tobin J | 14 |
#3 | Fabian Tibor | 13 |
#4 | Fisher Tobin Joseph | 6 |
#5 | Glassman Jonathan L | 5 |
#6 | Thomas Jesse M | 5 |
#7 | Covington Thomas C | 5 |
#8 | Glassman Jonathan Louis | 4 |
#9 | Thomas Jesse | 3 |
#10 | Prowten Timothy | 2 |
Publication | Filing date | Title |
---|---|---|
US2013224614A1 | Field-enhanced thermal decomposition of fuel storage compositions | |
US2013149620A1 | System and method for purging a fuel cell system | |
US2013149626A1 | System and method for device power management | |
US2013126013A1 | Method of manufacture of a metal hydride fuel supply | |
US2013078544A1 | System and method of leveraging thermal properties of fuel cell systems and consumer devices | |
WO2011028242A2 | A controller for fuel cell operation | |
WO2011011050A2 | Chemical hydride formulation and system design for controlled generation of hydrogen | |
WO2009097149A1 | A fuel cell air exchange apparatus | |
KR20080071118A | Fluid pump and connector assembly | |
US2007036711A1 | Hydrogen generator | |
EP1746957A2 | A method of controlling body temperature with an electrochemical device while providing on-demand power to an electrical device |