Application of Hans Theodor Boe

355 F.2d 961, 53 C.C.P.A. 1079
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedFebruary 17, 1966
DocketPatent Appeal 7535
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 355 F.2d 961 (Application of Hans Theodor Boe) 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 Hans Theodor Boe, 355 F.2d 961, 53 C.C.P.A. 1079 (ccpa 1966).

Opinion

SMITH, Judge.

The Board of Appeals affirmed the examiner’s rejection of claims 9, 11 and 12 of appellant’s application for patent Serial No. 845,743, filed August 12, 1959, for “Highly Porous And Absorptive Non-Woven Fabrics And Method of Making Same.”

The appealed claims are directed to a method of manufacturing highly porous absorptive non-woven materials in the nature of chamois leather. Such materials have good water retention as well as absorptive properties. As pointed out in the specification:

If these non-woven fabrics are being used as chamois leather they must not only be characterized by a high porosity but also by a high water retention power. The chamois leather must fullfill [sic] two re-requirements, firstly, to take away remnant water from the window pane and secondly to retain this water under pressure. A sponge for example is not suited for afterclean-ing and drying a window since the water retention capacity is poor. * * *

Claim 9, upon which claims 11 and 12 depend, defines the method as follows:

In a method of manufacturing highly porous absorptive non-woven materials having outstanding water-retention characteristics, the steps of:

1. ) impregnating a loose fiber web of cardable textile fibers with an aqueous latex foam containing 40-200 parts by weight of a pore-former selected from the group consisting of urea, thiourea, dicy-andiamide, and hexamethylene tet-ramine, per 100 parts by weight of latex solids,
2. ) re-impregnating the resulting web with substantially the same aqueous latex foam in the form of a paste,
3. ) drying the twice-impregnated web, and
4. ) thereafter washing the web with water to dissolve out the pore-forming agent.

Claim 11 is directed to' the method wherein the wash water contains an alkaline agent, and claim 12 the method wherein the web is subjected to an intermediate treatment with a Glauber’s salt-solution.

The claims were rejected under 35 USC 103 in view of:

Nottebohm 2,719,795 Oct. 4, 1955
Fernald 2,700,694 Jan. 25, 1955

The claimed method involves impregnating a fiber fleece with an aqueous latex foam containing in addition to a curable bonding agent, 40 to 200 parts by weight of a pore former selected from the group consisting of urea, thiourea, dieyandiamide and hexamethylene tetra-mine, per 100 parts by weight of latex solids. The thus impregnated material is then dried at a temperature below the curing temperature of the bonding agent. The resulting material is then impregnated with a paste made from substantially the same latex foam, dried again, and vulcanized. After drying and vulcaniza *963 tion, the material is washed with water to dissolve out the particles of pore-forming agent, producing a material containing pores in the bonding agent. The sheet material obtained is said to consist of “an open skeleton of intermingled polyposed fine cardable fibers.”

The differences between the claimed method and the method disclosed by Not-tebohm for making a similar type of material are (1) the point at which the pore-forming materials are initially introduced in the method and (2) the selection of the pore-forming materials from the group consisting of urea, thiourea, dicyandiamide and hexamethylene tetra-mine.

We shall consider each of these differences separately. It is appellant’s position that his introduction of the pore-forming materials in the initial latex foam produces a greater porosity in the finished material than is achieved by the Nottebohm method. To support this position, an affidavit was submitted, together with samples of the finished materials, which clearly establishes the greater porosity of the materials manufactured according to appellant’s method. We think it significant, however, that no tests are reported and no assertion is made as to the relative tensile strengths of the materials. We think it clear from the Nottebohm patent that the art had used pore-forming materials in what Not-tebohm refers to as the “prestabilization of the fleeces.” This step corresponds generally to what in appellant’s method is the first impregnation step. Notte-bohm in discussing this knowledge of the art states:

It has been found that the latices to be used for the prestabilization of the fleeces should be substantially free of fillers, such as starches or water soluble salts, which can subsequently be washed out to form mic-ropores, because the presence of such fillers, on the one hand, increases the viscosity of the latices to such an extent that it becomes practically impossible to produce a stable foam or to obtain in any other manner a satisfactory impregnation of unstabiliz-ed fleeces, while, on the other hand, binder particles deposited from binder liquids containing such fillers exhibit, after washing out of the pore formers, insufficient mechanical strength to effect by themselves a reliable and uniform stabilization of the fleeces.

It seems to us that the foregoing statement in Nottebohm indicates what one of ordinary skill in this art was expected to know, namely, that the pore-forming materials can be added with the latice-forming materials in the prestabilization of the fleeces but that such addition is subject to two problems, i. e., (1) the stability of the foam and it satisfactory impregnation of the fleece and (2) the “insufficient mechanical strength to effect by themselves a reliable and uniform stabilization of the fleeces.” Appellant does not disclose how his method overcomes the problems stated by Nottebohm except by the suggestion in his specification that:

It is known to produce highly absorptive porous non-woven sheet materials, so-called non-woven fabrics, by impregnating a batt of cardable, preferably polyposed fibers with an aqueous dispersion or emulsion of a bonding agent, such as natural or synthetic rubber, thermoplastic resins or the like, and hardening or curing said bonding agents.
It is further known to increase the porosity of said non-woven fabrics by incorporating into said emulsion or dispersion a water soluble salt, such as Glauber’s salt. Since these water soluble salts cause a coagulation of the latex, stabilizers, such as starch must be added. After curing of the bonding agent, the resulting non-woven fabric is subjected to the action of warm or hot water, thereby dissolving the water soluble salts and the stabilizer with the formation of pores within the cured bonding agent.
Although the porosity of the non-woven fabric may thus be increased, *964 said method is disadvantageous since the sharp edge crystals of the inorganic salts may cause mechanical damage to the fine delicate fibrous gauze. It is furthermore difficult to remove the sparingly soluble stabilizer, such as starch.

While Nottebohm does disclose pore-forming materials which might have the disabilities to which appellant refers, it is clear that Nottebohm’s teachings are not so limited. Thus Nottebohm states:

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355 F.2d 961, 53 C.C.P.A. 1079, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-hans-theodor-boe-ccpa-1966.