Grace is a registered patent agent with a background in mechanical and aerospace engineering. She focuses her practice on
Prior to joining the firm, Grace was a patent agent at an international law firm. Grace has patenting experience in the fields of mechanical engineering, aviation, electronic devices, artificial intelligence, machine learning, electric vehicles, medical devices, and materials science. Her practice also encompasses assisting with patent applications in international jurisdictions, reviewing patent portfolios, conducting freedom-to-operate analyses, and providing technical support for inter partes review proceedings before the US Patent and Trademark Office.
In addition to a bachelor’s degree in mechanical engineering and aerospace engineering, Grace also holds a certificate in Materials Science and Engineering from Princeton University. While working as an undergraduate researcher in Princeton’s Space Physics Lab, Grace made significant contributions to numerous engineering projects, such as designing knife-edge apertures for a vacuum system and optimizing its ion beam line to simulate solar wind conditions. Her senior thesis focused on ultrathin foils for space instrumentation related to the 2025 NASA Interstellar Mapping and Acceleration Probe (IMAP) mission. As part of that work, she modeled and floated ultrathin carbon foils for particle detectors aboard the IMAP satellite, which will study energetic particles and the interstellar medium.