The best way to try and figure that out is a patent search. I think you can do that through google. It’s not perfect. You could miss something but it is a good start
On Wed, Nov 10, 2021 at 10:59 PM Charles West via TriEmbed < [email protected]> wrote: > Hello, > > BIt of a weird question. Let me know if it's too off topic. > > I found a really interesting published paper which details a cheap and > relatively simple way to produce aerographene (made of graphene, in this > case with a density around 3x that of air). I've got some ideas of ways to > use it for space applications, but I don't want to get sued. > > If I may ask, how can you tell if a method outlined in a paper is OK to > use commercially? > > Thanks, > Charlie > _______________________________________________ > Triangle, NC Embedded Computing mailing list > > To post message: [email protected] > List info: http://mail.triembed.org/mailman/listinfo/triembed_triembed.org > TriEmbed web site: http://TriEmbed.org > To unsubscribe, click link and send a blank message: mailto: > [email protected]?subject=unsubscribe > >
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