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Barbara C.
Barbara C. Furie, Wellesley, MA US
| Patent application number | Description | Published |
|---|---|---|
| 20090271163 | Crystal structure of human factor VIII and uses thereof - The present invention provides crystals of human Factor VIII, in particular, a B-domain deleted human Factor VIII, and its three-dimensional structure. The present invention also provides the structural information of Factor VIII, and methods for identifying compounds that modulate Factor VIII activity, for determining structures of Factor VIII homologs or analogs, and for designing drug candidates for the treatment of hemophilia based on the structural information. | 10-29-2009 |
Barbara C. Stahly, West Lafayette, IN US
| Patent application number | Description | Published |
|---|---|---|
| 20090010388 | MICROPLATE AND METHODS OF USING THE SAME - Microplates having a body defining a plurality of wells, wherein the wells have at least one bottom portion configured to allow the sample to be analyzed by various methods in situ with minimized background interference in the data obtained, and methods of using the same, are disclosed. The improved microplate may also have wells having certain shapes and/or sizes to allow the sample to be analyzed with minimized background interference in the data obtained. A system for obtaining high-quality XRPD or Raman data is also disclosed. | 01-08-2009 |
Barbara C. Williams, Viola, ID US
| Patent application number | Description | Published |
|---|---|---|
| 20110027850 | In situ precipitation of calcium carbonate (CaCO3) by indigenous microorganisms to improve mechanical properties of a geomaterial - A method for increasing the concentration of calcium carbonate in a geomaterial that contains indigenous microorganisms capable of hydrolyzing urea to ammonia, which method includes enriching the geomaterial with a source of nutrients, adding urea to the geomaterial which is hydrolyzed to ammonia and which raises the pH of the geomaterial, and adding a source of calcium ions to the geomaterial. Carbonate ions obtained by the hydrolysis of the urea combine with calcium ions to form calcium carbonate. | 02-03-2011 |
