The Integrated Technology Portfolio: Fifteen Inventions in One U.S. Patent Application

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One Application, Fifteen Breakthrough Technologies

In February 2026, the United States Patent and Trademark Office received a consolidated nonprovisional utility patent application that bundles fifteen distinct inventions into a single, coherent portfolio. Application 19/540,453—filed under 35 USC 111(a)—covers an integrated technology portfolio spanning automotive propulsion, unified computing, electric jet propulsion, military satellites, quantum batteries, secure communications, probability data systems, nuclear waste recycling, smart wearables, disease cure discovery, landfill mining, and semiconductor seed-matrix design.

Why file fifteen inventions together? Existing solutions in each of these fields typically operate in isolation. Automotive, aerospace, energy storage, pharmaceuticals, and semiconductor design are developed and deployed as separate domains with limited cross-domain integration. This portfolio is designed to provide coherent documentation, buildable specifications, and clear paths to handoff, licensing, and deployment while preserving technical traceability and reproducibility across all fifteen embodiments.

The fifteen embodiments range from hardware platforms (electronic automotive with 800 V torque-plate propulsion, electric jet with quantum battery, war satellite, quantum battery with LED nano-charging) to software and data systems (Super Dome secure communication and blockchain, Alchemy probability data with compounds and synthesis), to process and method inventions (microwave nuclear waste recycling, disease cure discovery for diabetes, Alzheimer’s, and Parkinson’s, landfill recycling mine, semiconductor seed matrix for chip design). One invention—the smart shoe platform—bridges IoT hardware and backend data for government, military, and institutional applications.

Each embodiment is specified with enough detail to support build, test, and handoff. The patent abstract and claims define the scope; the detailed description and figures (1–15) provide the technical reference. For innovators and partners, the takeaway is simple: a single filing receipt (Confirmation # 1134, Patent Center # 74480330) now anchors a multi-domain technology suite with a single filing date and a single application number to use in all USPTO correspondence.

This article is based on the consolidated U.S. patent application specification and the USPTO electronic payment receipt for application 19/540,453.

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