Inventor · disambiguated record
Bhupendra Prasad Joshi
Also filed as: JOSHI BHUPENDRA PRASAD
7 granted patents·2 pending applications·25 citations·filing 2001–2008
80Inventor score
Top patents by PatentIndex Score
9 records- 0178US6590127B1Process for the preparation of pharmacologically active α-asarone from toxic β-asarone rich acorus calamus oilCOUNCIL SCIENT IND RES·Filed 2002·Granted Jul 8, 2003·13 cites·22 claims
- 0263US6544390B2Microwave assisted rapid and economical process for the preparation of substituted phenylaldehydes from trans and cis-phenylpropenes: a commercial utilisation of toxic cis-isomerCOUNCIL SCIENT IND RES·Filed 2001·Granted Apr 8, 2003·4 cites·18 claims
- 0361US6969778B2DDQ mediated one step dimerization of β-asarone or β-asarone rich Acorus calamus oil in the formation of novel neolignanCOUNCIL SCIENT IND RES·Filed 2003·Granted Nov 29, 2005·3 cites·7 claims
- 0458US6989467B2Microwave induced process for the preparation of substituted 4-vinylphenolsCOUNCIL SCIENT IND RES·Filed 2003·Granted Jan 24, 2006·2 cites·12 claims
- 0553US6833475B2Heptanonic acid and furanone compounds and compositionsCOUNCIL SCIENT IND RES·Filed 2003·Granted Dec 21, 2004·1 cites·6 claims
- 0650US6566557B2Process for the preparation of substituted trans-cinnamaldehyde, a natural yellow dye, from phenylpropane derivativesCOUNCIL SCIENT IND RES·Filed 2001·Granted May 20, 2003·2 cites·23 claims
- 0740US6579992B2Method for producing chiral dihydrotagetone, and its conversion to chiral 5-isobutyl-3-methyl-4,5-dihydro-2(3H)-furanoneCOUNCIL SCIENT IND RES·Filed 2001·Granted Jun 17, 2003·0 cites·30 claims
- 0839US2010093726A1Novel 4-amino-quinoline derivatives useful as anti-malaria drugsGIUSEPPE CAMPIANI·Filed 2008·Application pending·0 cites
- 0939US2003187306A1DDQ mediated one step dimerisation of beta-asarone or beta-asarone rich acorus calamus oil in the formation of novel neolignanCOUNCIL SCIENT IND RES·Filed 2002·Application pending·0 cites
Identity basis: PatentsView inventor disambiguation (2025Q4-odp release). How scoring works →