Application of Hoyler

181 F.2d 228, 37 C.C.P.A. 996
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedApril 3, 1950
DocketPatent Appeals 5631
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 181 F.2d 228 (Application of Hoyler) 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 Hoyler, 181 F.2d 228, 37 C.C.P.A. 996 (ccpa 1950).

Opinion

JOHNSON, Judge.

Thirteen claims in appellant’s patent application were rejected in the Patent Office by the Primary Examiner on a combination of references, the Board of Appeals affirming, and are now before us on appeal as provided under 35 U.S.C. § 59a, 35 U.S.C.A. § 59a, R.S. § 4911. One method claim was allowed in the Patent Office.

The invention relates to an improvement in the method of bonding electrically materials, at least one of which is thermoplastic. The specification describes the improvement as the application of heat to the materials to be bonded together through the use of a high frequency electric field established between cooperating electrodes connected to a high frequency oscillation generator. The process requires that at least one of the material's to be bonded be a dielectric. The heat occurs through dielectric losses when the materials are passed between the electrodes. The electrodes are in the form of rollers, and are of sufficient mass to conduct heat away from the surface of the material as they press against it upon either side. The roller electrodes are positioned upon a stand and connected by shafts or otherwise to1 a motor. A tension means is provided, and the rollers press against each other. Bonding is accomplished by bringing the materials together and passing them between the rollers. The surface of the materials remains relatively cool as heat is conducted away by the mass of the rollers, while the interior becomes tacky and under the tension-applied pressure of the rollers, a bond is effected. The feeding action may be accomplished by the roller electrodes alone, or by auxiliary feed rollers. The cooling effect1 of the relatively massive electrodes may be augumented by liquid coursing through hollow electrode rollers. The power input, frequency, tension of the electrodes, and feeding speed are’ all adjustable and may be selectively varied, according to the nature of the material being bonded, between 5 and 150 watts, 10 and 100 megacycles per second, 25 to 300 pounds per square inch, and 20 to 50 inches of material per minute, respectively.

Spot welding may be accomplished, the application teaches, by using as one of the electrodes, a roller, the surface of which is not a continuous electrical conductor, but rather which consists of metallic projections interspersed with nonconducting material so as to form a smooth roller surface with spaced conducting areas located cir-cumferentially on the surface. Each conducting area in the surface of that roller would in coming into position with the other electrode roller permit the high frequency electric field to exist at its maximum effective capacity. Then, as the roller revolved, that conducting area would move away tangentially from the surface of the other roller, interrupting or reducing the electric field. When successive conducting areas in the surface of the roller arrived and departed at the position of “contact” with the other roller, the high frequency electric field would vary from the maximum, at which bonding takes place, to a nonbonding minimum. In that *230 manner, spot bonding or spot welding of the material passing between the rollers can be effected.

All of the appealed claims are method claims drawn to the spot welding species of the method taught in the specification. In response to a requirement for division, apparatus claims were cancelled from the application at bar. Claim 14 is representative of the appealed claims, and reads: “14. The method of uniting a plurality- of elongated layers of contacting, dielectric material at least one of which becomes tacky when heated to a certain temperature which comprises feeding said layers past an operating station while maintaining said layers in contacting relation, subjecting said layers to a high frequency electric field at said station whereby to create dielectric losses therein to thereby heat said layers, varying the effective intensity of said field between a relatively high value sufficient to heat said one layer to said temperature and a relatively low value insufficient to heat said one layer to said temperature by reason of the dielectric losses created therein in the course of feeding successive portions of said layers to said station whereby to heat to said temperature only those areas of said one layer which are subjected to said relatively high intensity electric field, cooling the relatively outer' portion of at least said one layer simultaneously with the heating thereof whereby to confine the relatively hot portion thereof at substantially said temperature largely to a region of each of said heated areas which is contiguous to the contacting surfaces of said layers to thereby leave only substantially said regions thereof tacky, and applying pressure to said layers while said regions are tacky to cause them to adhere to each other at said areas.”

The appealed claims — 14 to 23, inclusive, and 46 to 49, inclusive — wqre rejected in the Patent Office as defining no patentable method steps over the following references in combination:

Johnston 2,322,298, June 22, 1943.
Strickland 2,354,714, Aug. 1, 1944.

Johnston’s patent covers a machine with a feed dog similar to that found on sewing machines as a means for moving material intermittently past an operating station. The machine has an anvil and a cooperating reciprocating plunger, both of which are heated inductively by electrical elements in which they are encased. When ■overlapped material, one layer of which at least is thermoplastic, feeds through the machine and stops in its intermittent movement, the plunger moves toward and against the anvil impinging upon and heating the surface of the material between them sufficiently for it to become tacky, .and simultaneously bonding the layers together by means of the pressure of the plunger against the anvil. Thus the material to be bonded moves through the machine, pausing intermittently while the reciprocating heated plunger in cooperation with .the heated anvil effects spaced bonds of the layers.

The patent to Strickland is directed to a method and apparatus of bonding or spot welding together under pressure materials which are dielectric .and thermoplastic by passing overlapped sheets between electrodes connected to a high frequency electric current source. The electrodes “may be of any desired shape,” are water cooled so as to conduct heat away from the surface of the material being bonded, may be pressed against the work by “any convenient and known means,” and if heating over a spot or small area is desired, may be “reduced in area” or “rounded to a hemispherical shape.” The power absorbed from the high frequency current by the dielectric material between the electrodes softens the thermoplastic layers and the weld or bond is completed by the pressure of the electrodes each against the other.

Claim 14 recites a method which consists of five’steps:

“1. Feeding contacting layers of dielectric thermoplastic material past an operating station;
“2. Subjecting the layers at that station to a high frequency electric field so as to heat the layers by the dielectric losses sufficiently to make the material tacky;
“3. Varying in the course of feeding the material the intensity of the high fre

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181 F.2d 228, 37 C.C.P.A. 996, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-hoyler-ccpa-1950.