Application of John A. Dow (Doris B. Dow, Trustee)

326 F.2d 775, 51 C.C.P.A. 963
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedMarch 2, 1964
DocketPatent Appeal 7059
StatusPublished

This text of 326 F.2d 775 (Application of John A. Dow (Doris B. Dow, Trustee)) 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 John A. Dow (Doris B. Dow, Trustee), 326 F.2d 775, 51 C.C.P.A. 963 (ccpa 1964).

Opinion

MARTIN, Judge.

This is an appeal from the decision of the Patent Office Board of Appeals affirming the examiner’s rejection of claim 23, the only claim remaining in appellant’s application serial No. 707,451, filed December 16, 1957 for HEAT TREATING FURNACE.

Claim 23 reads:

“In a heat treating furnace for processing work by heating the same in a controlled atmosphere, a furnace chamber having heat generating and work supporting means therein constructed and arranged relative to each other so that sufficient heát may be transferred by convection from said heat generating means to work arranged on said work supporting means so as to process such work, such heat generating means comprising a series of heating tubes each supported from and extending into said furnace chamber through a wall of said chamber, gas atomosphere [sic] generating means comprising a generator tube supported by and disposed coaxially within each of said heating tubes to define within each heating tube an annular combustion chamber the inner wall of which is provided by the generator tube and the outer wall of which is provided by said heating tube, each of said heating tubes having an inlet end disposed outside said furnace chamber and means supplying thereto a combustible fuel mixture to be burned in said combustion chambers for generating sufficient heat therein to heat said generator tubes, said furnace chamber and the work arranged therein to a temperature adequate to carry out such heat treating process, each heating tube and its generator tube forming a unit removable from said furnace chamber through said furnace chamber wall, each of said generator tubes having one end disposed outwardly beyond the inlet end of its heating tube to form an inlet through which gas is supplied to the interior of said generator tube, each generator tube having catalytic material therein and having an outlet in its other end communicating with said furnace chamber, said gas atmosphere generating means being operative for converting the gas supplied thereto in the presence of said catalyst and under the influence of the heat generated in said heating tubes into a gaseous atmosphere which is supplied through said generator tube outlets to said furnace chamber to come in contact with said heating tubes and said work, each of said heating tubes having the entire exterior surface of the portion disposed in said furnace chamber freely exposed to the gas atmosphere in said chamber for the circulation of such atmosphere thereover, and being disposed around its associated generator tube to shield the latter from the atmosphere in said furnace chamber whereby said gas atmosphere generating means is operated at a temperature exceeding that of said atmosphere, and a fan for circulating the gas atmosphere in said chamber over said heating tubes and over said work for transferring heat to said work in order to carry out such process.”

The invention relates to a radiant tube, controlled gas atmosphere, heat treating furnace useful for heat treating operations, e. g., annealing steel parts, in such *777 a manner as to avoid deearburization thereof. The furnace of the invention ís one in which the controlled gas generator is built into and forms a part of each of the radiant tubes which, are provided for heating the furnace.

Reproduced below are Figs. 1 and 2 of appellant’s application:

*778 Fig. 1 is a vertical sectional view of a furnace while Fig. 2 is an enlarged sectional fragmentary view of a radiant tube and gas generator taken generally along line 2-2 of Fig. 1.

Referring to Figs. 1 and 2, appellant’s furnace' comprises enclosing walls 10 of a refractory material which define chamber 12. Chamber 12 is provided with suitable work holders at 14 and a number of radiant tubes 16 suitably arranged so as to obtain the desired working temperature conditions in chamber 12. Each of tubes 16 projects laterally into chamber 12 through a side wall thereof.

The members 16 comprise a U-shaped tube having legs 20 and 22 connected by a return bend 24. The end of leg 20 projecting from the furnace has an air supply pipe 26 and a gas supply pipe 28 connected thereto whereby controlled proportions of air and gas are supplied under pressure to the interior of the tube leg 20.

The open end 30 of tube leg 22 provides a vent for the products of combustion ex-teriorly of chamber 12. Each of tubes 16 is mounted on a bulkhead support 32 which is suitably affixed to the outside of furnace wall 10. Each leg 20 and 22 of each tube 16 has a tube 34 arranged therein and in spaced relation with the inside wall of tube legs 20 and 22. The space between the outside of tubes 34 and the inside of the tube legs 20 and 22 constitute a combustion chamber for the gas-air mixture supplied to the tube leg 20 through the pipes 28 and 26. 1 One end of each of the tubes 34 extends through the wall of the return bend 24 and is provided with a gas outlet 36. The other ends 37 of the tubes project beyond the ends of tube legs 20 and 22 and are adapted to be supplied with a closely controlled suitable mixture of gas and air under pressure. The tubes 34, filled with catalyst 38, provide retorts in which gas supplied thereto in the presence of the catalyst 38 and under the influence of the heat generated in tube 16 produce a gas of proper analysis for the process being carried out in chamber 12, such gas being discharged into chamber 12 through outlet gas openings 36.

The examiner rejected claim 23 on the ground of res judicata on the basis of an earlier decision of the board in appellant’s parent application serial No. 670,-436 which affirmed the examiner’s rejection of claim 46 in that parent application. 2 The examiner is now taking the position that claim 23 does not patent-ably distinguish from claim 46.

The board sustained the examiner’s rejection of claim 23 on the ground of res judicata concluding that there is no “patentable difference” between claim 23 and claim 46.

Claim 46 of the parent application reads:

“In a heat treating furnace for processing work by heating the same in a controlled atmosphere, a heat insulated work receiving furnace chamber having heat generating and work supporting means therein constructed and arranged relative to each other so that sufficient heat may be transferred by convection from said heat generating means to work arranged on said work supporting means to so process such work, such heat generating means comprising a series of radiant tubes disposed in said chamber, means for generating sufficient heat in said tubes to heat said furnace chamber and said work arranged therein to a temperature adequate to carry out such heat treating process, gas atmosphere generating means comprising a generator tube disposed within each of such radiant tubes so as to be heated directly by the heat generated there *779

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Bluebook (online)
326 F.2d 775, 51 C.C.P.A. 963, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-john-a-dow-doris-b-dow-trustee-ccpa-1964.