Application of Charles A. Stokes, George B. Kistiakowsky and George E. Engelson

311 F.2d 826, 50 C.C.P.A. 874, 136 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 193, 1963 CCPA LEXIS 433
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJanuary 16, 1963
DocketPatent Appeal 6864
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 311 F.2d 826 (Application of Charles A. Stokes, George B. Kistiakowsky and George E. Engelson) 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 Charles A. Stokes, George B. Kistiakowsky and George E. Engelson, 311 F.2d 826, 50 C.C.P.A. 874, 136 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 193, 1963 CCPA LEXIS 433 (ccpa 1963).

Opinion

MARTIN, Judge.

This appeal is from a decision of the Patent Office Board of Appeals affirming the examiner’s rejection of claims 46 to 60 inclusive, the only remaining claims of the application Serial No. 129,089 filed November 23, 1949 for PRODUCTION OF METALLIC OXIDES.

The reference relied on by the examiner and board is

Saladin et al 2,823,982 Feb. 18, 1958 (filed Feb. 11, 1949)

Interference No. 87,281 was declared on January 25, 1955 between appellants’ application and the application which matured into the Saladin et al.- patent, supra. That interference was dissolved pro forma without regard to the merits on the basis of a joint motion in which the parties agreed that the single count in issue was not patentable to either party. The application of Saladin et al., the senior party, was subsequently passed to issue without the claim corresponding to the interference count.

Claims 46 and 60, illustrative of the appealed claims, read:

“46. The process of producing finely divided oxides of a metal selected from the group consisting of aluminum, titanium, silicon, zinc, antimony, chromium, beryllium, zirconium, • cobalt, nickel, cadmium, molybdenum and vanadium, which comprises vaporizing a halide of said metal, introducing said halide vapor free from contamination by hydrocarbon gas as a non-ignitable stream into an elongated reaction zone, simultaneously surrounding said stream with an annular flame containing water vapor formed therein as one of the combustion products and causing said stream to become intimately admixed with the combustion products in said flame, thereby hydrolyzing the metal halide vapor to the corresponding metal oxide by reaction with the water produced in said flame, and recovering the resulting pigment.”
“60. The process of producing finely divided aluminum oxide comprising vaporizing aluminum chloride, mixing said vapor with dry air to form a non-ignitable mixture, in-, troducing said vapor mixture free of contamination by hydrocarbon gas *828 as a stream into an elongated reaction zone, simultaneously surrounding said stream with an annular flame produced by burning a gaseous hydrocarbon in air and containing water vapor formed therein as a combustion product and causing said stream to become intimately admixed with the combustion products in said flame, thereby hydrolyzing the chloride vapor to aluminum oxide by reaction with the water produced in said flame, and recovering the resulting aluminum oxide.”

The appealed claims have been refused on multiple grounds. In the first place, the examiner held, and the board agreed, that appellants’ application does not support the limitation that the stream or mixture in which the metallic halide vapor is introduced into the reaction zone is “non-ignitable.” Additionally, it was held by the examiner that appellants are estopped from obtaining the claims because of their status as junior party in the interference. The board sustained that rejection and also found “no basis for concluding that the procedural steps of the appealed claims differentiate inventively over Saladin et al. to warrant the allowance of the appealed claims.”

Appellants’ application discloses a novel commercially practicable process for producing a pure finely divided metallic oxide from the corresponding metallic halide. The specific embodiments set forth in the application relate solely to the production of finely divided aluminum oxide. The examiner did not consider the production of the other claimed species of metallic oxides by appellants’ process to be patentably distinct from appellants’ production of aluminum oxide. Thus we shall assume that appellants’ specific embodiments relating to the production of aluminum oxide are equally applicable to the production of the other specific oxides recited in the illustrative claim, supra.

Appellants’ novel process consists in-feeding aluminum chloride to a heated vaporizer where it is caused to sublime and then conveying the resulting aluminum chloride vapors into one end of a reactor “either under their own vapor pressure or by means of dry heated air” with appellants preferring the latter. Simultaneously with the injection of the aluminum chloride vapor, a mixture of air and hydrocarbon gas, e. g., methane, is introduced into the reactor through a passage surrounding the injector used for the introduction of the vapor, with the passage and the injector terminating in the same plane as shown by the drawing of the application. The air-hydrocarbon gas mixture is caused to burn producing a flame in the reactor and the vapor containing the aluminum chloride flows into the center of the flame mass. Appellants state that the combustion, i. e., the burning, takes place at the moment of introduction of the air-hydrocarbon gas mixture and chloride vapor into the reactor and that the aluminum chloride vapor flowing into the reaction chamber is thereupon instantly hydrolyzed in the flame to finely divided aluminum oxide and hydrochloric acid by the-water produced from the burning of the-hydrocarbon-gas mixture. The aluminum oxide then passes out of the reactor and may be collected by any suitable means.

Appellants have characterized the reactions in the reactor in accordance with the following equations:

(1) CEU + 202 C02 + 2H2O

(2) 2AlCls + 3H2O AI2O3 + 6HC1

Equation (1) refers to the combustion of the hydrocarbon gas, in this case methane, with the production of carbon dioxide and water. Equation (2) 1 refers to the hydrolysis of aluminum chloride with the production of aluminum oxide and hydrogen chloride or hydrochloric acid.

*829 Our first task is to decide whether the limitation that the stream or mixture in which the metallic halide vapor is introduced into the reaction zone is “non-ignitable” is supported by appellants’ disclosure. Since the application does not so specifically characterize the stream or mixture as non-ignitable, that feature must be necessarily inherent in appellants’ disclosure in order to avoid the rejection based on insufficient disclosure. After a careful consideration of the application we think that feature is necessarily inherent in appellants’ process.

The principal object of appellants’ invention is to provide a novel commercially practicable process for producing a pure finely divided metallic oxide such as aluminum oxide. Appellants do this by a particular process which involves rapidly hydrolyzing a metallic halide such as aluminum chloride in the center of a flame mass. It seems to us that appellants contemplate that the metallic halide in their disclosed process undergoes only a hydrolysis as opposed to any other reaction such as an oxidation. In their application appellants state:

“ * * * The aluminum halide is rapidly hydrolyzed * * *.
******
“ * * * The reaction proceeds in accordance with the following general equation:
******
“(2) 2AlCls + 3H20 ->- AI2O3 + 6HC1
* * * * *

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Related

John E. Mahan v. Thomas F. Doumani and Clarence S. Coe, (Two Cases)
333 F.2d 896 (Customs and Patent Appeals, 1964)

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311 F.2d 826, 50 C.C.P.A. 874, 136 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 193, 1963 CCPA LEXIS 433, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-charles-a-stokes-george-b-kistiakowsky-and-george-e-ccpa-1963.