
Wayne R. Grohs has attended to all phases of patent prosecution while focusing extensively on drafting patent applications. He has written applications that have included those directed to ventilation and cooling systems for electric motors, airfoils, coatings for airfoils, flow control devices incorporating shape memory materials, diagnostic methods for Otto cycle engines based on selective cylinder operation, fuel cells and electrolysis cells, steering systems for automobiles, firearms, and fuel stabilization units for turbine engines. He also has extensive experience in drafting and prosecuting patents involving shaving devices and hemostatic agents. Prior to receiving his law degree, he worked as an applications chemist at King Industries and as a production plant chemist at R.T. Vanderbilt Corp. Wayne Grohs is also a lecturer of intellectual property law at the University of New Haven and has written on intellectual property issues for the Hartford Business Journal.
Wayne has counseled extensively one innovative business owner who has garnered more than 75 separate patents.