MOBILITY ASSISTANCE DEVICES

Brand Owner (click to sort) Address Description
ABLE LIFE Stander Inc. 2410 Heritage Drive Logan UT 84321 Mobility assistance devices, namely, bathtub, shower and toilet grab bars of metal;Walkers to aid in mobility; crutches; medical apparatus, namely, handle-type device to assist mobility-impaired individuals in supporting their weight when transferring between a sitting or prone position and a standing position;Bed rails;
SIGNATURE LIFE Stander Inc. 2410 Heritage Drive Logan UT 84321 Mobility assistance devices, namely, bathtub, shower and toilet grab bars of metal; and metal poles;Invalid walkers; orthopedic walkers; walkers to aid in mobility; medical apparatus, namely, handle-type device to assist mobility-impaired individuals in supporting their weight when transferring from sitting or prone positions into or from a standing position; and vertical pole support and mobility transfer aid for elderly, infirm and disabled persons;Bed rails; furniture, namely, tray tables; and mobility assistance devices, namely, bathtub, shower and toilet grab bars not of metal;
 

Where the owner name is not linked, that owner no longer owns the brand

   
Technical Examples
  1. Conventional CMOS devices suffer from imbalance because the mobility of holes in the PMOS transistor is less than the mobility of electrons in the NMOS transistor. The use of strained silicon in the channels of CMOS devices further exacerbates the difference in electron and hole mobility, as strained silicon provides a greater increase in electron mobility than hole mobility. However, hole mobility is increased in the SiGe layer underlying the strained silicon layer. Therefore, a more evenly-balanced, high-speed CMOS device is formed by including strained silicon in the NMOS transistor and not in the PMOS transistor of a CMOS device.