Application of George R. Harris

399 F.2d 245, 55 C.C.P.A. 1404
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJuly 3, 1968
DocketPatent Appeal 7990
StatusPublished

This text of 399 F.2d 245 (Application of George R. Harris) 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 George R. Harris, 399 F.2d 245, 55 C.C.P.A. 1404 (ccpa 1968).

Opinion

WORLEY, Chief Judge.

Harris appeals from the decision of the Board of Appeals which affirmed the examiner’s rejections of claims 25-28 in his application 1 as “based upon an insufficient disclosure” and as “unpat-entable over Soday 2 in view of Auer 3 under 35 U.S.C. 103.”

*246 The invention relates to a method of forming a soft rubber product by vulcanizing a composition comprising natural or synthetic rubber, a non-volatile plasticizer and a partially sulfur-vulcanized vegetable oil, as well as the product so produced. The specification points out that it is desirable to make a solid, dense rubber having the “softness” of sponge rubber but without the disadvantageous water absorption properties of that material. According to appellant:

Previous efforts to develop a solid, dense rubber having a high degree of softness by adding the various plasticizers to the rubber mix have not been successful in producing a dense rubber having the same degree of softness as sponge rubber. The principal difficulty along these lines has been that the production of a soft rubber requires the addition of such a large amount of plasticizer and softener that the material cannot be handled through the usual methods of extruding, molding, or calendering. Also, rubber softened with large quantities of plasticizer could heretofore be vulcanized only in a rigid mold or the like which maintains the article in the desired shape during the vulcanizing process. Efforts to make extruded articles out of prior art soft rubber compositions have not been successful because if the article has internal passages or openings or thin wall sections, it is not possible to support these parts of the article during vulcanization and the heat will cause the rubber to become so soft as to lose its original shape and collapse or distort to such a degree that the article after vulcanization has lost its shape. [Emphasis supplied.]

The use of a partially vulcanized vegetable oil as a component of the soft rubber compositions is said to obviate those difficulties and permit extrusion and vulcanization of an article without it losing its shape. Claims 25 and 26 are representative :

25. In the method of producing as a substitute for cellular sponge rubber a shaped, soft, non-cellular elastomeric body from a solid rubber containing a brown vulcanized vegetable oil and a plasticizer, the improvements of increasing the tolerance of the solid rubber to augmented amounts of the plasticizer and thereby providing a soft yet solid, vulcanizable elastomer while retaining sufficient stiffness to undergo a shaping operation prior to subsequent vulcanization, said improvements comprising:
(a) providing a conjugated diene polymeric rubber having a relatively high degree of unsaturation and therefore readily susceptible to a cross-linking reaction;
(b) forming an admixture consisting essentially in weight per cent of about 24 per cent to about 35 per cent of said rubber, about 17 per cent to about 25 per cent of a non-volatile plasticizer, about 30 per cent to about 50 per cent of a partially sulfur-vulcanized brown vegetable oil, the percentage of said brown vulcanized vegetable oil being substantially at least as great as that of said rubber, and sufficient elemental sulfur to provide substantial vulcanization of the rubber and further vulcanization of the partially vulcanized brown vulcanized vegetable oil;
(c) shaping said admixture to the form of said elastomeric body, said partially vulcanized vegetable oil being sufficiently vulcanized to impart stiffness to the shaped admixture in spite of the solubilizing effect of the plasticizer;
(d) heating the admixture to a temperature within the range of about 280° F. to about 350° F. to effect vulcanization of the rubber and additional vulcanization of the brown vulcanized vegetable oil with simultaneous interreaction between the rubber and vulcanized vegetable oil; and
(e) thereby producing a shaped, soft, non-cellular solid elastomer having a tensile strength from about *247 150 psi. to about 700 psi., and elongation from about 450 per cent to about 800 per cent, a Shore A durom-eter hardness of about 5 to about 25, and less than 0.5 per cent water absorption.
26. A shaped, soft, non-cellular elastomeric body made by the process of claim 25.

The examiner noted that Soday discloses natural or synthetic rubber compositions containing a blend of high boiling aromatic oils and sulfur-vulcanized brown vegetable oils. According to Soday, solid, rubber-like, sulfurized vegetable oils, known as “factice,” had previously been “extensively employed in the rubber industry as softening agents” and greatly assist “in the milling, calendering, and/or extrusion” of rubber compositions. The amount of sulfur So-day utilizes to crosslink the vegetable oil depends on the “type of oil employed” and “the properties desired in the finished [oil] product.” Smaller amounts of sulfur yield partially vulcanized viscous liquids and larger amounts yield solid, rubber-like products which are more completely crosslinked or vulcanized than the viscous liquids. As to the quantities of the particular aromatic oils and sulfurized vegetable oils which he employs in his rubber composition, So-day states:

The proportion of such oils which may be incorporated in sulfurized oils may be varied over a very wide range depending, among other things, upon the properties of the sulfurized oil, and the properties desired in the resulting composition. In general, however, I prefer to employ compositions containing at least 10% of either component. Thus, compositions containing 10% sulfurized oil and 90% aromatic oils of the type described herein, as well as those containing 10% aromatic oils of the type described herein and 90% sulfurized oil, possess properties which render them particularly desirable for use in a number of commercial applications, * * *.
******
The quantity of sulfurized oil-aromatic oil composition of the type described herein which may be incorporated in natural or synthetic rubbers, or elastomers, may be varied over very wide limits, depending upon the properties desired. Thus, for example, quantities varying from a few percent, or less, to an amount equal to, or greater than, the quantity of rubber, or rubber mixture, employed in the composition, may be used.

The examiner also observed Auer’s discussion of the prior art:

* * * brjef reference is here made to the prior practice in use of factice, sometimes also called “rubber substitutes.”
Factice is commonly produced merely by vulcanizing a fatty oil with sul-phur. The resulting vulcanized product was then employed in rubber mixes, during the compounding on the rubber mill. In general, the purposes for employing such factice are one or more of the following:

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Related

Specification
35 U.S.C. § 112

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Bluebook (online)
399 F.2d 245, 55 C.C.P.A. 1404, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-george-r-harris-ccpa-1968.