Application of Frank Passal and Timothy P. Flynn

426 F.2d 409, 57 C.C.P.A. 1260
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedMay 28, 1970
DocketPatent Appeal 8319
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 426 F.2d 409 (Application of Frank Passal and Timothy P. Flynn) 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 Frank Passal and Timothy P. Flynn, 426 F.2d 409, 57 C.C.P.A. 1260 (ccpa 1970).

Opinion

ALMOND, Judge.

This is an appeal from the decision of the Patent Office Board of Appeals affirming the rejection of claims 1-13, all of the claims in appellants’ application entitled “Novel Electroplating Process.” 1

The invention relates to a process for high-speed bright nickel plating. Prior art nickel plate production rates are undesirably slow, the specification states, while attempts to speed them up through using high plating current densities and various primary and secondary brighteners or bath additives have resulted in inadequately leveled deposits. Appellants have allegedy solved these prior art problems by maintaining a cathode current density at a level of at least 10 asd (amperes per square decimeter) and a high relative velocity between the nickel plating bath and the cathode representing the material to be plated. This velocity may be maintained by either impinging a stream of electrolyte onto the cathode or by various techniques such as vibration, rotation of the cathode and pumping of the electrolyte past the cathode.

Claim 1 is illustrative:

1. The method of high speed electroplating a bright nickel deposit which comprises electroplating said nickel deposit from a nickel-bath containing a brightening and leveling amount of coumarin and a secondary *410 brightener, maintaining the cathode current density during said plating at a level of at least about 10 asd, and maintaining a high relative velocity between said nickel-bath and said cathode thereby obtaining a highly lustrous, leveled nickel plate over a wide cathode current density range.

Claims 2-10 all depend from claim 1. Claims 2 and 3 specify the amount of eoumarin as at least about 0.2 g/1 (grams per liter), and from 0.8 g/1 to 2.0 g/1, respectively. Claim 4 recites the amount of secondary brightener as from 1 g/1 to 10 g/1, and claim 5 defines the secondary brightener as saccharin. Claims 6 and 7 limit the cathode current density to values of 20-120 asd and 20-60 asd, respectively. Claim 8 recites maintaining the relative velocity between the nickel-bath and cathode at 60-320 cm/second, and claim 9 further limits the relative velocity to 150 cm/second. Claim 10 defines the embodiment wherein the nickel-bath is impinged on the cathode. Claim 11 is an independent claim describing a process similar to that of claim 1, further defining the process as one wherein the nickel-bath contains 0.2 g/1 to saturation of eoumarin and 1-10 g/1 of secondary brightener and wherein the cathode current density during plating is maintained at a level of about 20-120 asd. Claim 12 depends from claim 11 and defines the secondary brightener as saccharin. Claim 13 also is dependent upon claim 11 and limits the cathode current density to 20-60 asd.

The references relied upon are:

Michael 3,245,886 April 12, 1966
Du Rose et al. 2,782,153 February 19,1957 (Du Rose)
Boelter, Jr. 2,870,709 January 27,1959 . (Boelter)

Wesley, W. A. et al. (Wesley), “Electrodeposition of Nickel at High Current Density,” Proceedings of the 36th Annual Convention, American Electroplaters’ Society, pp. 79-91 (1949).

Du Rose discloses a process for producing nickel electrodeposits of greatly increased brightness and smoothness. The patent states:

This invention is primarily concerned with the fact that although electrodeposits taken from acid nickel plating solutions containing eoumarin exhibit extraordinary smoothness they are only semi-bright, and attempts to increase their brightness by the use of addition agents of the type of saccharin or naphthalene sulfonic acids result in improved brightness with loss of smoothness when the surface being coated is quite smooth, and can result in decrease in both smoothness and brightness when the surface to be coated is quite rough. * * * If, instead of using naphthalene sulfonic acids, saccharin was used to improve the brightness, improved brightness was obtained and the gain in smoothness was about the same.

The reference discloses that the lost smoothing action can be largely restored by adding, in addition to the eoumarin, not only an aromatic sulfonamide but also leveling agents such as quaternary nitrogen compounds and plating at a cathode current density which may be as high as 10.8 asd.

Boelter discloses high-speed deposition of copper from a conventional bath by a method of impinging the electrolyte onto the cathode at a flow rate of 500-1000 ft./min.

*411 Michael discloses maintaining an electroplating bath near the saturation concentration of the additive component by adding the difficultly soluble component in solid excess beyond the saturation point.

Wesley discloses that increased agitation of simple nickel plating baths, i. e., not containing brightener additives, permits higher current densities and faster plating rates.

Claims 1, 2 and 4-13 were rejected under 35 U.S.C. § 103 as unpatentable over Du Rose in view of Wesley and Boelter, and claim 3 was rejected under the same section of the statute on the same references with the addition of Michael. It was the examiner’s opinion that “if one wished to deposit nickel from the bath of Du Rose et al. at higher current densities one of ordinary skill in the art would obviously apply the agitation means of Wesley et al. or Boelter, Jr. to the Du Rose et al. bath and electroplate as recited.”

Claims 1-7 and 10-13 were further rejected as indefinite under 35 U.S.C. § 112, the examiner taking the position that it “is not clear what ‘a high relative velocity’ means.”

The board, in affirming the examiner, took the view that Du Rose used the same type of bath utilized by appellants with the further improvement of a quaternary nitrogen compound, the addition of which was not excluded by appellants’ claims. It concluded, therefore, that:

The changes, if any, over Du Rose et al. are in the cathode current density * * * and in the relative velocity between the bath and the cathode * * *. The cathode current density of claims 1 to 5, 8, 9, and 10 does not distinguish over the Du Rose et al. disclosure of 100 asf, equivalent to 10.8 asd and falling within the terms of these claims.
In our opinion, it would be obvious to a knowledgeable person in this art, seeking to speed up the process of Du Rose et al., to adopt the expedient suggested by Wesley et al.

The board also sustained the rejection under 35 U.S.C. § 112, stating that “the terminology adopted by appellants cannot serve to point out wherein the prior art ends and appellants’ process begins.”

Appellants contend that the board erred in several respects.

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Related

Application of Frank Passal
426 F.2d 828 (Customs and Patent Appeals, 1970)

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Bluebook (online)
426 F.2d 409, 57 C.C.P.A. 1260, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-frank-passal-and-timothy-p-flynn-ccpa-1970.