Application of Arbeit

201 F.2d 923, 40 C.C.P.A. 831
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedFebruary 6, 1953
DocketPatent Appeals 5913
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 201 F.2d 923 (Application of Arbeit) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Customs and Patent Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Application of Arbeit, 201 F.2d 923, 40 C.C.P.A. 831 (ccpa 1953).

Opinion

COLE, Judge.

This litigation involves a patent application relating to a method and apparatus for manufacturing glass, and particularly to the heating process required to melt the glass-making materials and refine the glass.

The invention claimed by the applicants has, as its objective, the elimination of coloration which is known to occur in glass having a high melting point that has been heated by passing an electric current through the glass bath between submerged graphite electrodes. The theories advanced in explanation of the coloration phenomenon are somewhat vague; yet it seems that graphite, when in contact with 'hot glass, has a tendency to color the glass by its reducing action on some elements of the glass constituents.

Contending that it was not previously known that coloration was related to that specific degree of temperature called fining (refining), the applicants have proposed a limited use of the graphite electrodes during the heating process, terminating contact between glass and electrodes prior to the refining of the glass. Thus, the electrodes are present in the glass mass only during the melting of the glass raw materials and only at temperatures prevailing in the melting zone of the furnace. Defining the period of melting in chemical terms, the applicants state that when the glass-making materials are introduced into the glass furnace, said materials containing oxidizing substances, they either prevent, for a time, the formation of compounds coloring the glass, or else, by combining with such compounds, yield a non-colored product; that when the oxidizing materials are exhausted, the graphite will color the glass; and that as the exhaustion of such materials and the end of the melting period are concurrent events, suppression of the electrodes from the glass at this critical time renders the product color free.

As the terms “melting” and “fining” (refining) have specific meaning in the glass industry, and will be referred to frequently *924 in the course of this opinion, it is well for us briefly to define them as those terms are known in the art “Melting” has reference to the application of heat to the solid glass-making materials whereby they are fused and brought to a molten condition. As the aforesaid materials still contain occluded air, bubbles, unmelted solid particles, etc., which have not been melted by the end of the melting operation, the glass is subj ected to a “fining” (refining) process whereby the temperature in the furnace is necessarily raised to free the glass of these impurities. There is some difference of opinion with respect to the exact temperatures necessary to carry out each of the above pperations. The applicants state that melting and refining temperatures are approximately 1100-1300 degrees and about 1450 degrees centigrade, respectively. The Patent Office claims that there is a wide variation in melting or fining temperatures depending on the varying proportion or ingredients of fhe glass bath. In any event, it is apparent that the refining temperature is the very highest produced in the furnace.

While the applicants state that their study of the coloration problem was primarily concerned with' glass melting .at high temperatures and glass having a low expansion coefficient and containing boric acid, they further indicate that the result achieved, i. e., the production of colorless glass, is also applicable in imparting an extra-white quality to ordinary glass melting at relatively lower temperatures.

In proceedings before the United States Patent Office, the Board of Appeals affirmed the decision of the Primary Examiner in rejecting applicants’ claims 3, 4, 5, 6, 20, 23, 24, 27, 28 and 30-37 inclusive. Patent number 1,944,855, dated January 23, 1934, issued to the inventor Wadman, is the sole reference relied on in the rejection of all of the claims with the exception of claims 3, 4, 35 and 37 which were considered as being directed to non-elected species. Those claims, consequently, are not here to be considered on the merits.

It is significant to note from the very outset that the applicants not only vigorously deny the presence of an anticipation, but also contend that the disclosures of the reference patent are diametrically opposed to their own. Further, it is asserted that both the Primary Examiner and the Board of Appeals failed wholly to- understand the novelty of applicants’ invention and also placed an erroneous interpretation on the Wadman reference.

Claim 20 is deemed to be illustrative of applicants’ process and claim 33 representative of the apparatus. They read as follows :

“201 A method for-the manufacture of a-glass having a low expansion coefficient containing boric acid which comprises heating the glass mass by an electric current passing through it and supplied by electrodes in contact with it, limiting the time of the contact of' the glass with the electrodes to a part of the melting operation, then the contact of the glass with the electrodes being ended, and continuing the heating of the glass mass by any other heating means, until it is refined.”
“33. In an apparatus for the continuous manufacture of glass, a tank comprising a melting zone and a refining zone, electrodes localized in the melting zone of said tank and in contact with the glass bath in said zone, means to supply an electric current to said electrodes, other heating means in said melting zone, means interposed between the melting zone and the refining zone and provided with an opening for the passage of the glass flowing from said melting zone to said refining zone, said opening being of sufficiently small size, so that the glass flow from the melting zone to the refining zone due to the withdrawal of the finished glass from the tank gives no room for a flow of refined glass back to the melting zone, and burners in the refining zone constructed and arranged for refining the glass.”

It may thus be seen that a melting and a refining zone is provided with localized electrodes and “other heating means”'(flame ports) utilized to heat the glass materials during the melting operation. Contact between electrodes and glass ends prior to *925 fining. Burners in the refining zone supply-heating means necessary to the refining phase of the manufacture. A barrier separates the two zones and is provided with a small opening whereby the melted glass moves into the refining zone, and means are also provided to insure against backflow of refined glass.

As we have previously stated, the applicants claim to set forth a truly novel invention, the core of which is founded on the proposition that, unknown to the prior art, graphite electrodes and molten glass are incompatible after the completion of the melting operation and consequently must be separated from each other to avoid coloring the glass.

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230 F.2d 435 (Customs and Patent Appeals, 1956)
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Bluebook (online)
201 F.2d 923, 40 C.C.P.A. 831, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-arbeit-ccpa-1953.