Application of De Vaney

185 F.2d 679, 38 C.C.P.A. 735
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedDecember 5, 1950
DocketPatent Appeal 5722
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 185 F.2d 679 (Application of De Vaney) 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 De Vaney, 185 F.2d 679, 38 C.C.P.A. 735 (ccpa 1950).

Opinion

GARRETT, Chief Judge.

This is an appeal from the decision of the Board of Appeals of the United States Patent Office affirming the rejection by the Primary Examiner of all the claims—three in number—embraced in appellant’s application for patent relating to alleged improvements in the beneficiation of silicious iron-bearing minerals by cationic froth flotation processes. It is understood that by “beneficiation” as used in mineral art concentration of the ore is meant.

The claims read:

“6.‘ Process of concentrating the oxidic iron content of an aqueous pulp of a silicious, essentially non-magnetic oxidic iron-bearing material by froth flotation, which comprises adding to the aqueous pulp an alkali in an amount sufficient to alkalize the pulp to a pH of from about 8 to about 10, subjecting the pulp at such alkalinity to froth flotative treatment using a frother and a cationically-acting amine collector consisting predominantly of a water-soluble form of a primary aliphatic amine having an aliphatic chain corresponding in length to that of a coconut oil fatty acid, and recovering a concentrate of oxidic iron from the underflow.

“9. Process of concentrating the oxidic iron content of an aqueous pulp of a silicious, essentially non-magnetic oxidic iron-bearing material by froth flotation, which comprises adding to the aqueous pulp an alkaline-acting alkali metal compound in an amortnt sufficient to alkalize the pulp to a pIT of from about 8 to about 10, subjecting the pulp at such alkalinity to froth flotative treatment using a frother and as a cationic collector a water-soluble derivative of primary dodecylamine, and recovering a concentrate of oxidic iron from the underflow.

“10. Process of concentrating the oxidic iron content of an aqueous pulp of a silicious, essentially non-magnetic taconite by froth flotation, which comprises adding to the aqueous pulp an alkaline-acting alkali metal compound in an amount sufficient to alkalize the pulp to a pH in excess of 8, subjecting the pulp at such alkalinity to froth flotative treatment using a frother and a cationically-acting amine collector consisting predominantly of a water-soluble form of a primary aliphatic amine having an aliphatic chain corresponding in length to that of a coconut oil fatty acid, and recovering a concentrate of oxidic iron from the underflow.”

*680 The references consist of three patents and two publications, cited in the brief of the Solicitor for the Patent Office in the following arrangement:

“Lenher, ' 2,132,902, Oct. 11, 1938;

Harris, ' 2,177,985, Oct. 31, 1939;

Trotter et al., 2,205,503, June 25, 1940;

Bureau of Mines R. I. 3333, pages 13-20,

Arbiter-Collection of Metals by Amines’ Tech. Paper No. 1581—pp. 7, 8.”

In the brief for appellant it is pointed out that claim 6 (which the board quoted as illustrative) is broader than claim 9 (which the brief quotes as representative) “in the respect that the cationic collector may be any ‘water-soluble form of a primary aliphatic amine having an aliphatic chain corresponding in length to that of a coconut oil fatty acid’,” and that claim 10 “is limited to a treatment of ‘essentially non-magnetic taconite’ * * * and calls for maintenance of ‘a pH in excess of 8’ in the' pulp circuit.” The brief describes the taconite so referred to as “a particular ferruginous chert found in great quantities-in northern Minnesota and elsewhere.”

There is no contention before us, nor was there any below, that there is any limitation in any claim which distinguishes it patentably from any other claim. Therefore, as is suggested in the brief of the Solicitor for the Patent Office, all three claims stand or fall together.

In the brief for appellant it is said, in substance, that the claims are limited to what is asserted to be his “specific contribution to the art of cationic froth-flotative beneficiation,” to wit: “ * * * in the case of beneficiating oxidic (specifically, hematitic) iron ore materials, using higher primary (or mixed primary-secondary) aliphatic amines as the collectors, the pulp circuit should be distinctly alkaline (pH 8 or higher). His researches brought out the additional fact that there is a relationship between the optimum alkalinity and the length of the alkyl chain of the alphatic amine collector: ‘the longer the chain the higher should be the alkalinity, with a pH of about 10 as maximum’ * * (Italics quoted.)

A somewhat less technical description is given in the decision of the board as follows: “The subject matter of the claims under consideration is a process for concentrating non-magnetic oxidized iron ores by froth flotation in which a cationicallyacting amine collector, consisting predominantly of a-water soluble form of a primary aliphatic amine having an aliphatic chain corresponding in length to that of a coconut oil fatty acid, is used as frother, and the pulp is alkalized to a pH of from about 8 to about 10.”

All the claims were rejected by the Primary Examiner as lacking invention over the patent to Lenher taken in view of the other references. Concerning the Lenher reference he said, inter alia: “The patent to Lenher is the basic patent on the froth flotation of acidic ore with the ‘so called cationic reagents’. This patent discloses that acidic or negative charge constituents of ores may be floated with amines or quaternary ammonium compounds.”

The brief for appellant states: “This [the Lenher] patent * * * is understood to be the first disclosure—or among the first disclosures—of cationic froth flotation. * * * ”

' The cationic process differs materially from what is known as the anionic froth flotation process which latter, so far as we can discern from the record, was the only process in use prior to the development of the cationic process. 1

*681 In the brief for appellant, after some analysis of the references, it is said (in the course of its argument as to the non-applicability of the Lenher patent as a reference) : “It should be noted that appellant does not claim invention in the use of aliphatic amines as cationic collectors: Len-her made that important discovery. Nor is appellant claiming invention in the concept of floating silica from iron oxide broadly: that is the subject matter of his application Serial No. 500,002 (Record, p. 85 et seq.). What he here claims as patentable invention is the improved method involving making the pulp circuit distinctly alkaline pH of 8 to 10 in floating silica away from non-magnetic iron oxide when using an aliphatic amine as the catiomc collector. (Italics ours.)

So, in the final analysis, the ultimate issue presented is relatively narrow, having to do primarily with the pH range of the pulp referred to in the claims.

The brief for appellant before us contains what is termed a “Glossary” (which, it may be said, conforms to standard chemical publications) in which pH is defined as follows: “ ‘pH’: hydrogen ion concentration or ‘hydrogen potential’; a measure of the acidity or alkalinity of an electrolyte. Llydrogen ion concentrations vary between 1 (for strongly acidic) through 7

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Bluebook (online)
185 F.2d 679, 38 C.C.P.A. 735, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-de-vaney-ccpa-1950.