Application of Copping

203 F.2d 731, 40 C.C.P.A. 950
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedApril 15, 1953
DocketPatent Appeal 5939
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 203 F.2d 731 (Application of Copping) 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 Copping, 203 F.2d 731, 40 C.C.P.A. 950 (ccpa 1953).

Opinions

COLE, Judge..

This is an appeal from a decision of the Board of Appeals affirming the Primary Examiner’s rejection of claims 1 to 6 and 9 to 20 (all; inclusive) relative to alleged inventive improvements claimed in a car-bonator and dispenser apparatus designed for use in the soft drink industry.

It is known that appreciable problems are encountered in attempting to combine carbon dioxide and water to form carbonated water in that these compounds' tend to resist being united in the first instance and seek to separate at the earliest, opportunity. Maximum efficiency and optimum results as to the finished drink have, in large part, been prevented by this and other related problems. '■ ■

Applicants state that it has been found that the production of the carbonated water solution is most satisfactory under certain temperature conditions (water has increasing ability to absorb gas' as temperature 'decreases), and under tircumstanc-es where all possible water surface 'is exposed to-the gas. -The alleged invention is, therefore, mainly concerned with' ■ setting up the aforesaid conditions so that the potability of the finished,product may be enhanced and the dispensing operation carried out in a more efficient and economical manner than has heretofore been'possible.

Representative claims 1 and 20 of the application on appeal reád as follows:

“1. In a device of the character described, a pressure tank, a distributor head therein, a plurality of pliable car-bonator curtains attached to said head, a source of gas supply and a source of water supply communicating with said pressure tank.
“20. In a device of the character described, a pressure tank, a distributing header mounted therein, a flexible yielding carbonator curtain secured to-said header, a water cooling element adjacent the tank and communicating . with said header and curtain, means-regulating the flow of water into said cooling element, a syrup tank adjacent said cooling device, the contents of both the pressure tank and the syrup tank receiving refrigeration from the cooling element, a dispensing nozzle partly positioned in said syrup tank and likewise receiving refrigeration from said cooling element, and a source of CO2 gas supply to the carbonator curtain.”

The Board of Appeals based its rejection of all claims in the application on appeal on the following references: Gardner 654,725 July 31, 1900; Delen 2,195,449 Apr. 2, 1940; Burk et al. 2,376,341 May 22, 1945; Tull 2,434,374 Jan. 13,1948.

The. application discloses, in general, at. carbonator and dispenser wherein water is cooled and combined with carbon dioxide to form carbonated water properly refrigerated for beverage purposes: More specifically, the invention is concerned with what applicants have characterized as a “Curtain-type” carbonator, alleged to be an entirely new type of carbonator. This apparatus consists of a cylindrical container, the axis of which is vertically disposed. A series of circular troughs are located one within the other at the upper end of the container and are in stepped relation to one another; water flowing into the outermost trough will, when the trough is filled, spill into the next lower trough, such action continuing until all troughs become filled. Properly located holes in the troughs are provided so that water may be supplied to the carbonating curtains. The curtains are suspended from the lower portion of each of the troughs, and in the language of some of the claims are formed of a glass cloth material, made of a continuous filament of glass, said materials being flexible and yielding and having a wick like action which facilitates in the handling of large quantities of water in a manner most conducive to high carbonation. This feature of the apparatus, according to the ap[733]*733plicants, is the very heart of their invention in that it teaches for the first time the application and utilization of pliable curtains which produce maximum results both as to speed and volume of carbonation. In other words (as stated by the Primary Examiner), “the purpose of these curtains is to secure more intimate contact between the water and the gas in order to facilitate carbonation.”

This provision for flexible, pliable curtain members of specified material was the outgrowth of extensive experimentation on the part of the present applicants. They state that the most efficient carbonating is obtained with the thinnest possible film of water and that by reason of the wick like action of the specified curtain material, the flowing liquid is spread thinly and evenly there-across; the carbon dioxide, previously introduced to a predetermined pressure in the carbonator, is* thereby more readily absorbed. In further explanation, we quote from certain of applicants’ remarks as disclosed in the record:

“ * * * applicants disclose and teach a structure in which water forms a definite film over the entire surface of unique carbonating curtains, and while the water is flowing over said curtains, this thin film is subjected to CO2 gas, in such a manner as to absorb large quantities thereof, both a high rate of carbonation and what is more important, a high degree thereof being thereby afforded. * * *
♦ * * * * *
“ * * * it may also be noted that additional advantages accrue in the use of curtains [flexible, yielding, and having a wick like action] in that even if the carbonator is tilted substantially, these members always tend to maintain a vertical plane, the carbonation not being appreciably slowed by any reasonable departure from a vertical plane on the part of the carbonator, itself. This is particularly important in the case of ships and airplanes, where considerable tilting may be expected to occur, and where bad results then accrue in the case of conventional car-bonators heretofore known to the art.”

It appears to us, therefore, that applicants are proposing what they deem to be unique carbonating curtains, the purpose of which is to unite CO2 gas and water in such manner whereby maximum results both as to speed and volume of carbonation is assured, and that the uniqueness of said curtains lies in the fact that they are flexible and yielding and are made of material having a wick like action whereby the water is spread in a thin film across the large absorption surface of the carbonating curtains.

The principal reference relied upon by the board in rejecting the claims on appeal is the patent to the inventor Delen. Claims 1 to 6 and 11 to 19 were said to be either fully met by Delen or unpatentable there-over. Applicants have made a motion to dismiss the appeal as to claim 13 which motion will be considered in the course of the opinion.

The patent to Delen relates to a water cooling and carbonating device. That inventor, in part, states in his specification:

“An object of this invention is a simple and inexpensive apparatus which will quickly and efficiently cool water and charge it with carbonic acid gas and .take advantage of the fact that the ability of water to absorb gases increases as its temperature decreases.”

Delen shows a pressure tank provided with a distributor head therein and a wire mesh screen attached to said head. A source of carbon dioxide and a sóurce of water is also provided which communicates with the pressure talán The wire mesh screen is disclosed as the part in which the CO2 gas is contacted with the water and hence corresponds in matter of form to applicants’ carbonating curtains.

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Related

Pittsburgh Plate Glass Co. v. Ladd
220 F. Supp. 721 (District of Columbia, 1963)
Application of Copping
203 F.2d 731 (Customs and Patent Appeals, 1953)

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203 F.2d 731, 40 C.C.P.A. 950, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-copping-ccpa-1953.