Application of Cecil Boling and Alexander J. Tigges

292 F.2d 306, 48 C.C.P.A. 1050
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJuly 12, 1961
DocketPatent Appeal 6704
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 292 F.2d 306 (Application of Cecil Boling and Alexander J. Tigges) 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 Cecil Boling and Alexander J. Tigges, 292 F.2d 306, 48 C.C.P.A. 1050 (ccpa 1961).

Opinion

MARTIN, Judge.

This is an appeal from a decision of the Board of Appeals of the United States Patent Office affirming the examiner’s rejection of claims 4 and 6, the only claims of appellants’ application for a patent on a heat exchange apparatus.

The appealed claims are as follows:

“4. In a heat exchange unit of the character described for cooling water wherein it is desirable to provide a high heat transfer relationship with the water and wherein the water may freeze and produce very substantial pressures upon the walls confining it during some conditions of operation, the combination of, a metal tube which has successive portions which are substantially parallel and spaced apart and are not closer than one-quarter inch from each other at any portion, said tube is adapted to withstand substantial hoop tension from within the passageway which it forms, and an enclosing block of cast aluminum forming a unitary wall structure wherein each tube portion is surrounded by a wall portion of at least one-quarter inch throughout, said block surrounding said tube and formed thereon by a casting operation with the molten metal being at a sufficiently low temperature to prevent material melting or dissolving of the metal forming the tube and with the metal forming the block shrinking after solidifying thereby to place the tube under substantial precompressive forces whereby the block establishes a high heat conductivity relationship with the tube which relationship is maintained throughout the normal range of operating temperatures during use of the unit, said tube expanding when internal forces of the order of 10,000 to 30,000 pounds per square inch are exerted in its passageway and to transmit hoop tension forces to the surrounding block wall and being placed under hoop tension whereby the tube and the block are loaded with hoop tension forces substantially simultaneously without exerting forces beyond the elastic limit of the tube or block wall portions.

“6. A heat exchange unit as described in Claim 4, wherein said tube is a helical coil and wherein said unit includes a second helical coil, said helical coils having their turns positioned alternately and substantially parallel throughout in evenly-spaced relationship, said block being of aluminum with a copper content not greater than the order of four per cent, and being generally cylindrical.”

The references relied on by the examiner and the board are:

Mautsch, 1,989,996, Feb. 5, 1935

French Patent, 613,103, Aug. 13, 1926

The invention relates to apparatus intended for cooling water or other beverages. The embodiment described in the application comprises in pertinent part a pair of intertwined helical coils of copper or stainless steel tubing embedded in a hollow cylindrical casting of aluminum. It is contemplated that the beverage would be passed through one coil and a refrigerant through the other coil. The aluminum block would act as a heat transfer medium.

*308 It is specified that the two coils be of the same diameter and pitch with turns of both coils positioned alternately and parallel in evenly spaced relationship. The preferred dimensions are coil tubing of one-quarter inch outside diameter, coil turns spaced with tubing centers five-eighths inch apart, and an aluminum cylinder wall three-quarters inch thick so that each tube is surrounded by a wall of aluminum at least one-quarter inch thick.

Appellants specify that the heat exchanger be fabricated by positioning the two coils in a cylindrical mold and filling the mold with molten aluminum at such temperature 1 that the tube coils, if made of copper, will not be melted, or dissolved or alloyed into the aluminum. Appellant appears to consider this mode of manufacture an essential feature of the invention because when the molten aluminum solidifies, it is said to shrink tightly against the embedded tube coils and compress each tube to a slightly smaller diameter. It is contemplated that during use, water may accidently freeze in the beverage tube. The internal pressure exerted by the resulting ice would place the tube walls under considerable “hoop tension.” 2 It is expected, however, that the tube coil would not burst and crack the block because both precompressed tube coil and aluminum block would work together in restraining the internal forces. This particular aspect of appellants’ invention seems to be summarized by the following statement in the application:

“ * * * The block has the property of shrinking the proper amount [during casting] to produce the desired precompression of the tube, and then when the stresses [i. e., hoop tension] are increased during the freezing of the water the block picks up its share of the load and works with the tube in restraining the forces involved. * * *

Appealed claim 4 is somewhat broader than the illustrative embodiment just discussed in that only a single metal tube of unspecified diameter is recited and only minimum permissible tube spacing and block wall dimensions are specified. Appealed claim 6, which is dependent from appealed claim 4, recites a helical coil structure for the metal tube and a second helical coil as in the illustrative embodiment, and specifies use of aluminum with a particular maximum copper content.

The French patent discloses a heat exchanger comprising a pair of intertwined helical coils of metal tubing embedded in a mass of aluminum in the form of a hollow cylinder or ring. The drawing which is part of the French patent shows a device which appears to be substantially the same as that shown in appellants’ drawing.

The Sellick et al. patent discloses refrigerating apparatus which comprises a copper refrigerant coil embedded in an aluminum casting, and was relied on by the examiner and the board because of the following sentences therein: *309 Sellick et al. suggest solving this problem by plating the copper coil with a metal of higher melting point, for example, nickel or chromium.

*308 “ * * * We have found, however, that, when working with certain metals, such for example, as copper and aluminum, the tubes being of copper and the casting of aluminum, there is a tendency for the copper coils to dissolve in the aluminum when the latter is in its molten state. This is true even though the melting point of aluminum is 658° and that of copper is 1083° C.”

*309 Mautsch discloses “headers of tubular heat exchange apparatuses.” Such devices are used as connectors between thin metal tubes and other parts of a heat exchanger. According to Mautsch, a header is to be constructed by inserting various tube ends including those of thin ■copper tubes into the walls of a header-box fabricated of thin metal. The whole structure serves as a casting core around which molten metal such as an aluminum •alloy is subsequently poured. When the aluminum solidifies, it shrinks and grips the walls of the tubes and box tightly together.

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Related

In re Skoner
517 F.2d 947 (Customs and Patent Appeals, 1975)

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Bluebook (online)
292 F.2d 306, 48 C.C.P.A. 1050, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-cecil-boling-and-alexander-j-tigges-ccpa-1961.