Deckard Cain
Well-known member
- Joined
- Oct 8, 2018
- Messages
- 702
- Reaction score
- 539
- Points
- 93
A patent can only be attributed to something that is novel. If you describe it previously in detail in a scientific journal you can't patent it.Long story short - the supposed 'solid state' battery that Daimler or this supplier has unveiled isn't novel or that great of an improvement over a similar sized pack using conventional lithium NMC packs.
You can still publish interesting/novel discoveries in journals while retaining a patent. A patent is a method of legal enforcement in the absence of licensing that is above and beyond the scientific truth - it is meant for the realm of humans instead of pure nature. Disclosing a discovery via journal may offer a path to an alternative implementation via reverse engineering, but thats a stretch.
You can publish scientific papers with something that you wish to patent, but you can't disclose on the paper the process you are patenting.
That might make paper acceptance difficult because reviewers might not accept that you don't disclose how the data you present was generated.
Papers in journals with high impact factors usually have very stringent review guidelines and reviewers are ruthless and very conservative in what they accept. If you knew the demands they sometimes make it's ridiculous.