MOLDING COMPOSITIONS MADE FROM A HIGH-MOLECULAR-WEIGHT PROPYLENE POLYMER

Details for Australian Patent Application No. 2003294925 (hide)

Owner BASELL POLYOLEFINE GMBH

Inventors DOLLE, Volker; BOHM, Thomas; TERWYEN, Herbert

Pub. Number AU-A-2003294925

PCT Number PCT/EP2003/0146

PCT Pub. Number WO2004/056922

Priority 102 61 107.6 20.12.02 DE; 60/442,821 27.01.03 US

Filing date 19 December 2003

Wipo publication date 14 July 2004

International Classifications

C08L 023/10 Compositions of macromolecular compounds obtained by reactions involving only carbon-to-carbon unsaturated bonds

F16L 009/12 Pipes

C08L 023/12 Compositions of macromolecular compounds obtained by reactions involving only carbon-to-carbon unsaturated bonds

C08L 023/14 Compositions of macromolecular compounds obtained by reactions involving only carbon-to-carbon unsaturated bonds

C08F 010/06 Homopolymers or copolymers

C08F 210/06 Copolymers

C08K 005/34 Use of organic ingredients

Event Publications

22 April 2004 Complete Application Filed

  Priority application(s): 102 61 107.6 20.12.02 DE; 60/442,821 27.01.03 US

19 August 2004 Application Open to Public Inspection

  Published as AU-A-2003294925

8 September 2005 Application Lapsed, Refused Or Withdrawn, Patent Ceased or Expired

  This application lapsed under section 142(2)(f)/See Reg. 8.3(3). Examination has not yet been requested or directed for this application. Note that applications or patents shown as lapsed or ceased may be restored at a later date.

Legal

The information provided by the Site not in the nature of legal or other professional advice. The information provided by the Site is derived from third parties and may contain errors. You must make your own enquiries and seek independent advice from the relevant industry professionals before acting or relying on any information contained herein. Check the above data against the Australian Patent Office AUSPAT database.

Next and Previous Patents/Applications

2003294926-SEPARATOR

2003294924-METHOD FOR PRODUCING AMINOACIDS