Application of Henry Kepper

371 F.2d 865, 54 C.C.P.A. 1013
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedFebruary 2, 1967
DocketPatent Appeal 7715
StatusPublished

This text of 371 F.2d 865 (Application of Henry Kepper) 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 Henry Kepper, 371 F.2d 865, 54 C.C.P.A. 1013 (ccpa 1967).

Opinion

SMITH, Judge.

Appealed claims 29, 30, 33, 34, 36 and 38 of appellant’s application 1 stand rejected under 35 U.S.C. § 103 as being directed to an invention which would have been obvious to a person of ordinary skill in the art in view of:

Heath (1) 2,477,454 July 26, 1949

Heath (2) 2,596,954 May 13, 1952

Nelson 2,692,050 Oct. 19, 1954 2

The invention in issue relates to a process for treating iron containing ores whereby the iron oxides (usually in the form of hematite Fe2 O3) are reduced to a magnetic state (usually to magnetite, Fe2 O*) to permit magnetic separation of the iron constituents from the non-iron constituents.

Appellant’s claimed process comprises a combination of treatment steps which appellant describes in his brief as including :

(1) introducing an iron containing ore into a fluidized bed
(2) injecting directly into said fluidized bed a liquid hydrocarbon fuel and
(3) simultaneously introducing a controlled amount of oxygen containing gas for fluidizing said bed and for supporting combustion of the liquid hydrocarbon, said gas containing 40% to 60% of the oxygen required for the complete combustion of said liquid fuel.

Under these conditions, appellant asserts that the partial combustion of the liquid hydrocarbon fuel produces reducing agents directly in the bed of the ore to be reduced and that incomplete combustion of the fuel produces a portion of the heat (and in certain embodiments, á major portion if not all the heat) for maintaining the fluidized bed at reducing temperatures in the range from about 600° C. to 1000° C. Thereafter the reduced ore is removed from the reactor, cooled and the iron fraction magnetically separated from the non-iron fraction.

Appellant in his brief here refers us to his brief on appeal before the board for a discussion of what is asserted to be the problem in the art which appellant alleges has been solved by the claimed process. The advantages of the claimed process as there discussed by appellant are:

a. Combustion of the hydrocarbon fuel and reduction of the ore are effected in one bed. It is not necessary to maintain two distinct beds or chambers wherein reduction is conducted in one bed and combustion conducted in another bed.
b. By injecting the liquid hydrocarbon fuel directly into the bed, reducing agents are produced in said bed *867 which immediately reduce the hematite to magnetite.
c. The combustion of the liquid hydrocarbon fuel in the bed produces at least a portion of the heat necessary for maintaining the bed within the required reduction temperature range.
d. The installation costs of a plant using direct fuel injection in accordance with this invention is about 50% of the cost of a conventional plant using gas generators.
e. A savings of about 50% is also realized in the power cost of a plant practicing this invention.
f. For a given degree of reduction, by using direct fuel injection, there is a fuel savings of about 20% over a plant using gas generators, since in the latter case, a substantial portion of the heat value in the reducing gases is lost during transfer of said gases from the generator to the reduction zone.

Claim 29 is representative of the claims on appeal and is as follows:

29. A process for reducing the iron containing material in an ore to a magnetizable state which comprises; establishing and maintaining on a perforated constriction plate a fluidized bed of said ore at a temperature in the range of about 800° C. to about 1000° C.; introducing into said bed the ore material to be reduced; introducing into said bed a liquid hydrocarbon fuel, introducing through said constriction plate into said bed an oxygen containing fluidized gas, said gas containing about 40 to 60% of the oxygen required for the stoichiometric oxidation of said liquid hydrocarbon fuel; subjecting said liquid hydrocarbon fuel to incomplete combustion with said oxygen containing gas in the presence of said iron containing material in said fluidized bed thereby producing reducing agents for effecting the reduction of said iron containing material to a magnetizable state; said incomplete combustion providing at least a portion of the heat required for maintaining said fluidized bed at the necessary reducing temperatures; and discharging the thus reduced iron containing material from said bed.

The three patents relied upon by the board to support the rejection of the claims disclose admittedly different processes from ' that claimed. The issue presented under 35 U.S.C. § 103 requires an evaluation of these differences and a determination of whether the claimed invention as a whole would have been obvious under the conditions of section 103.

Viewing the references as of the time of appellant’s invention, we adopt the view of the Heath patents taken by appellant in his brief. In substance this view is that Heath (1) discloses a fluid bed process for reducing the iron oxide constituents in an ore to magnetite in a multi-compartment reactor wherein the ore and the combustible materials are maintained in separate independent beds arranged vertically and in series so that substantially no combustion occurs in the ore reducing zone and substantially no ore reduction occurs in the combustion zone. Reduction occurs when heated hematite particles from the combustion zone are contacted with a fluidizing gas containing “reducing and potential heat characteristics or constituents.” From the reducing zone the fluidizing gas passes through the combustion zone wherein any burnable components in the gas are burned to heat the hematite particles to reduction temperature. As stated in Heath (1):

* * * the fundamental feature of the invention revolves about the reducing operation on the ore as carried out in the lower or reducing zone wherein there is substantially no combustion * * #

The fluidizing gas, supplied to said ore in the reduction bed, has reducing constituents sufficient to reduce the ferric oxide constituents of the ore to Fe3 CL but insufficient to reduce those constituents to FeO or Fe.

*868 However, to successfully practice the invention, Heath (1) provides:

* * * at the same time this control of quantity of reducing constituents is exercised (to reduce Fe2 03 to Fe3 0* only) it must be recalled that the total volume of supplied gas (both fluidizing gas and reducing gas) must be continued to meet the requirements of maintaining the ore fluidized or in teeter. (Comments in parentheses added.)

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Bluebook (online)
371 F.2d 865, 54 C.C.P.A. 1013, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-henry-kepper-ccpa-1967.