Application of Neal A. Pennington

302 F.2d 532, 49 C.C.P.A. 1101
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedMay 18, 1962
DocketPatent Appeal 6777
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 302 F.2d 532 (Application of Neal A. Pennington) 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 Neal A. Pennington, 302 F.2d 532, 49 C.C.P.A. 1101 (ccpa 1962).

Opinion

SMITH, Judge.

The Board of Appeals affirmed the examiner’s rejection of claim 33 of appellant’s application for patent Serial No. 473,509, filed December 7, 1954, for improvements in a “COMBINED HUMIDIFIER-DEHUMIDIFIER.” The rejection, based on 35 U.S.C. § 103, is that the claimed invention would have been obvious to one of ordinary skill in view of the references which are:

Newton et al. 2,200,243 May 14, 1940
Farr 2,286,480 June 16, 1942

The single claim on appeal reads as follows:

“33. A humidity changer for air conditioning, comprising; two air passages; means for impelling air through each of said passages; a moisture transferrer comprising a packing composed of corrugated sheets of non-metallic fibrous material, impregnated with a non-volatile hygroscopic substance, a structure for supporting said packing to position the corrugations to extend through the transferrer in the direction of air-flow, thereby dividing the packing into mutually-supporting small passageways having common partition-walls extending through the transferrer, and being open at both ends to allow the flow of air therethrough; means for moving said transferrer cyclically across said passages; and heating means in one of said passages to regenerate the transferrer.”

The sole issue is whether the board was correct in holding that:

“Given the Newton et al and Farr patents, we consider it would be obvious to workers in the art to increase the contact area in the Newton et al wheel by making it of corrugated sheeting as taught by Farr while still using hygroscopic material as desired by Newton et al for its moisture absorbing function. Impregnating the material with any known non-volatile hygroscopic substance to increase its hygroscopic property involves only skill and is not a patentable expedient.”

Appellant’s invention is a humidity exchanger for conditioning air by transferring moisture from one stream of air to another. In the embodiment shown in the drawing and described in the specification, the moisture transferrer removes moisture from an air stream in one passage and transfers it to an air stream in another passage. For example, a stream of air to be dehumidified, such as air entering a building, passes through one passage where the moisture transferrer absorbs moisture from the air. The other stream of air, such as air being exhausted from the building, passes through another passage where it removes the previously absorbed moisture from the moisture transferrer.

Appellant’s “moisture transferrer,” in one embodiment, is a wheel carrying hygroscopic or moisture absorbing material. This wheel revolves on an axis parallel to both air streams and intersects the streams so that the air flows axially through part of it. The air streams are located on opposite sides of the axis of rotation. The hygroscopic material has a greater affinity for water vapor than the air to be dehumidified so that moisture from such air is taken up by the transferrer. The other stream of air is heated to a temperature at which it has a greater affinity for water vapor than the hygroscopic material so that the latter loses moisture to the air in such stream. Stated another way, the stream of air to be dehumidified has a much higher relative humidity than the second stream of air. Moisture flows from the air to be dehumidified to the moisture transferrer and then from the latter to the heated air in the second stream. *534 Each portion of the moisture transferrer is moved continuously in a closed circuit through the separate streams of air successively to first remove moisture from the air to be dehumidified and then transfer it to the other stream of air and so on.

The humidity changer as thus fa-r described is, as admitted by appellant, similar to the disclosure in the patent to Newton et al. Applicant’s improvement as defined in claim 33 is directed to a new combination of elements including an improved packing for the moisture transferrer “composed of corrugated sheets of a non-metallic fibrous material,” one form of which is disclosed as “corrugated asbestos paper or the like” impregnated with “some appropriate solution of a hygroscopic liquid or salt.” The packing is supported to position the corrugations in the cylinder so as to extend axially through the transferrer in the direction of air flow, thus dividing the packing into mutually supporting small' passageways having common partition walls extending through the transferrer. The small passageways are open at both ends to allow the air of the separate streams to flow there-through.

Appellant asserts that claim 33 covers a humidity changer which is distinguished from the references either singly or combined:

“ * * * by defining among other elements in a humidity changer, a moisture transferrer comprising a packing composed of corrugated sheets of non-metallic fibrous material, impregnated with a non-volatile hygroscopic substance, a structure for supporting said packing to position the corrugations to extend through the transferrer in the direction of air flow, thereby dividing the packing into mutually-supporting small passageways having common partition walls extending through the transferrer, and being open at both ends to permit the free flow of air therethrough.” [Emphasis added.]

While the claimed structure may possess advantages over the prior art structures, it does not, in our opinion, claim a structure which would have been unobvious to one of ordinary skill in the art. 35 U.S.C. § 103.

It is clear that the identical structure of claim 33 is not disclosed in the prior patents to Newton et al. and Farr, since neither one discloses a packing of thin sheets of non-metallic fibrous material impregnated with a hygroscopic substance. However, the patent to Newton et al., discloses dehumidifying means for an air conditioning system comprising a freely rotatable dehumidifying wheel having its upper portion extending into and across an upper air passage and its lower portion extending into and across a drying and reactivating chamber. The Newton et al. dehumidifying wheel is formed of “a suitable hygroscopic material” for absorbing moisture from air and is provided with axially extending passageways for air to flow through the wheel. Fresh air and return air from a room are drawn through the upper air passage by a fan and flow through the passageways in the dehumidifying wheel where moisture in the air is absorbed. As the dehumidifying wheel rotates, portions thereof which have absorbed moisture pass out of the upper air passage into the lower drying and reactivating chamber where air, heated by a heating element, is blown through the passageways in the wheel to drive off absorbed moisture.

The Farr patent discloses an “AIR PURIFIER OR CONDITIONER” comprising a wheel-like purifier element continuously wetted with water and mounted to rotate in a duct through which air to be purified and humidified is drawn by a fan.

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Related

Pennington v. Commissioner of Patents
284 F. Supp. 670 (District of Columbia, 1968)

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Bluebook (online)
302 F.2d 532, 49 C.C.P.A. 1101, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-neal-a-pennington-ccpa-1962.