Application of Fred Fortess and Werner A. P. Schoeneberg

369 F.2d 1009, 54 C.C.P.A. 889
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedDecember 19, 1966
DocketPatent Appeal 7578
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 369 F.2d 1009 (Application of Fred Fortess and Werner A. P. Schoeneberg) 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 Fred Fortess and Werner A. P. Schoeneberg, 369 F.2d 1009, 54 C.C.P.A. 889 (ccpa 1966).

Opinion

ALMOND, Judge.

This is an appeal from the decision of the Board of Patent Appeals affirming the rejection of process claims 1-7, 9-14 and 21, and product claims 17-20 in appellants’ application serial No. 680,783, filed August 28, 1957 for “Anti-Stati-cized Cellulose Esters.” 1 No claims were allowed by the examiner.

The invention relates to a process of producing surface-saponified, heat-treated filamentary material of cellulose esters, such as a cellulose triacetate fabric, and the products resulting therefrom.

The saponification is effected by the use of an aqueous solution of an inorganic alkali such as NaOH, and the result is a filament having a core of the original cellulose triacetate surrounded by a thin skin of regenerated cellulose. The saponification step can be carried out at a temperature ranging from about room temperature to the boiling point of the solution. The concentration of alkali can range from 25% to as little as 0.2% by weight. The duration of treatment can vary from as little as 15 seconds to as much as 90 minutes.

The heat treatment step may be carried out under the same conditions as are used for unsaponified triacetate material, and heat may be supplied by contact with hot air, steam, hot oil, molten metal, infra-red radiation, or high frequency electric field. The temperature will vary with the heat treating medium used, with optimum results being obtained at about 230° C. The material may be treated in the relaxed condition or while held under tension.

In addition to those two principal steps, a bleaching operation may precede the saponification step. Odors normally imparted by the bleaching agent, e.g. peracetic acid, are eliminated by the saponification alkali which serves to neutralize any residual bleaching agent. Although previously colored cellulose triacetate may be used, the fabric is generally dyed after the saponification step, with dyes of the well-known dispersed cellulose acetate type being preferred. The surface saponified material of the invention is disclosed to take up such dyes at substantially the same rate as the starting material before saponification. The “preferred” sequence of operation is surface saponification, coloring and heat treatment, although one may start with a heat-treated triester fiber.

The treated materials are disclosed to:

* * * exhibit permanent anti-static properties, a better hand, improved resistance to abrasion, better wettability by aqueous liquids such as printing pastes, freedom from odor, resistance to spotting and plasticizing, and the ability to be ironed at relatively high temperatures without damage.

Although the materials against which the above quoted improvements are observed is not explicitly stated, the subse *1011 quent paragraph further discloses that in the dyed condition the treated materials “exhibit better resistance to ozone-fading and gas-fading as compared with the usual filamentary materials made up of cellulose esters of low hy-droxyl content,” i.e., triesters.

The saponification decreases the tendency to stick to the hot iron and raises the safe ironing point temperature to about 220-230° C. from an original un-saponified and not heat-treated value of not above 190° C. The heat treatment raises the safe ironing temperature still further to about 240-250° C.

The heat treatment increases the degree of crystallinity, and the crystalline order index, a measure of the size and perfection of the crystallites, and also improves the glazing resistance and shrinkage on pressing with moist steam as compared to a non-heat treated or un-crystallized triacetate fiber. The core of the heat treated materials have a crystal-linity and index substantially the same as a solid triacetate fiber that has been heat treated to have a safe ironing point about between 210-240° C. The improvement in the above-noted properties and in the safe ironing point are correlated with the increase in the crystalline order index.

Representative claims read:

21. Process for the treatment of textile material, which comprises sa-ponifying the fiber surfaces of a textile material comprising fibers of a cellulose lower fatty acid ester containing at most 0.12 alcoholic hydroxyl groups per anhydroglucose unit in the cellulose molecule thereof, with substantially the entire balance of the cellulose hydroxyl groups esterified with the lower fatty acid radicals while leaving the fiber interiors intact, and treating the textile material to increase the crystallinity and crystalline order index of said intact fiber interiors.
17. Filamentary material comprising a core of cellulose acetate having an acetyl value of at least 61% by weight, calculated as acetic acid, surrounded by a substantially uniform integral skin of regenerated cellulose, ranging in thickness from about 0.05 to 0.3 microns.
19. Filamentary material comprising a plurality of filaments each ranging in denier from 2 to 6, each filament comprising a core of cellulose acetate of at least 61.5% acetyl value, surrounded by a substantially uniform integral skin of regenerated cellulose, the thickness said skin being such that the average acetyl value of each filament ranges from 58.5 to 61% by weight, calculated as acetic acid.
20. Filamentary material comprising a core of cellulose acetate having an acetyl value of at least about 61.5% by weight calculated as acetic acid and a safe ironing point of at least 230° C., surrounded by an integral skin of regenerated cellulose.

Claim 21 broadly calls for a “treatment” rather than a heat treatment step since it is disclosed that effects similar thereto may be achieved by the use of known swelling agents. The thickness of the regenerated cellulose outer skin is alternatively defined in claim 19 as an average acetyl value 2 of the whole filament *1012 as compared to the core value of at least 61.5%. Claim 20 is said to be drawn to the product as heat treated by reference to the safe ironing point value of the core. The remaining claims refer in more detail to the coloring step or colored product, to the bleaching step, or to the alkalinity values.

The Patent Office rejected all the claims as obvious variations, 35 U.S.C. § 103, of the following references:

Briggs 1,425,364 Aug. 8, 1922
McKee et al. (McKee) 1,767,543 June 24, 1930
Dreyfus et al. [I] 1,884,623 Oct. 25, 1932
Dreyfus [II] 2,366,241 Jan. 2, 1945
Finlayson et al. 2,862,785 [Finlayson] Dec. 2, 1958
Mork (British) 20,672 Feb. 9, 1911
British Celanese 304,596 Jan. 21, 1928 (British)
High Polymers, Volume 5, Emil Ott, Cellulose and Cellulose Derivatives, 230 (1956).

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Bluebook (online)
369 F.2d 1009, 54 C.C.P.A. 889, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-fred-fortess-and-werner-a-p-schoeneberg-ccpa-1966.