Blue
laser patent case settled with academic inventor
Following
an investigation by the U.S. International Trade Commission, Sony,
Sanyo Electric, Exceed Perseverance Electronic and Lucky Light Electronics,
have agreed to license patents owned by a Columbia University Professor
that cover basic semiconductor technology used in Blu-ray video players.
US patent for blue/ultraviolet semi-conductor technology was originally
issued back in 1993.
The investigation was launched into possible patent infringements
related to Blu-ray disc players, mobiles and other products, based
on a complaint filed in February by Columbia University Professor
Emeritus Gertrude Neumark Rothschild (pictured), who was seeking to
block imports into the United States of a range of products that she
said had been infringing her patent.
Dr Rothschild conducted "ground-breaking" research in the
1980s and 1990s into the electrical and optical properties of wide
band-gap semiconductors. The research, the firm said, has proven pivotal
in the development of short-wavelength emitting (blue/violet) diodes
used in consumer electronics.
Rothschild was issued a US patent in 1993 that covers a method of
producing wide band-gap semiconductors for LEDs and LDs in the blue/ultraviolet
end of the spectrum. The portion of her work at issue in the ITC case
focuses on using gallium nitride-based semiconductor material in LEDs
and LDs.
Earlier this year, South Korea's Seoul Semiconductor Co Ltd, and Taiwan's
Everlight Electronics Co Ltd signed agreements with Professor Rothschild
who previously settled issues of infringement of her patents with
Nichia, OSRAM, and Koninklijke Philips Electronics NV