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Richard D. Baertsch

Researcher at General Electric

Publications -  40
Citations -  552

Richard D. Baertsch is an academic researcher from General Electric. The author has contributed to research in topics: Signal & Germanium. The author has an hindex of 13, co-authored 40 publications receiving 550 citations.

Papers
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Patent

Ground fault circuit breaker

TL;DR: In this article, a ground fault circuit breaker structure characterized by an insulating integral housing having a pair of side-by-side compartments that are separated by a partition wall is described.
Journal ArticleDOI

Gamma Ray Detectors Made from High Purity Germanium

TL;DR: In this paper, a solution regrowth technique for growing P+ and N+ contacts on high purity germanium is described, where copper contamination is minimized by using KCN to remove copper from the surface of the GEM and by the gettering ability of molten indium in contact with the gEM. Diodes with leakage currents as low as 3 × 10-11 amp for 2000 volts applied to a fully depleted 4 mm thick detector have been fabricated.
Patent

High order sigma delta oversampled analog-to-digital converter integrated circuit network with minimal power dissipation and chip area requirements

TL;DR: In this article, an improved high order interpolative oversampled (sigma delta) analog-to-digital converter network including a plurality of cascade-coupled integrator stages is formed on a single integrated circuit chip in a manner that conserves power and chip area.
Patent

Real time data acquisition system including decoupled host computer

TL;DR: In this article, a real-time data acquisition system includes a personal computer and a detector framing node cooperating to control generation of radiation and control radiographic detection, where data is acquired by a detector frame node and communicated independently of a non-real time operating system running on a host computer.
Journal ArticleDOI

Intracell charge-transfer structures for signal processing

TL;DR: An approach is presented for implementing a fully programmable transversal filter using surface charge-transfer techniques and both experimental results and theoretical expressions for their performance are presented.