Application of Paul Wiest and Fritz Esper

328 F.2d 1012, 51 C.C.P.A. 1127
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedMarch 26, 1964
DocketPatent Appeal 7153
StatusPublished

This text of 328 F.2d 1012 (Application of Paul Wiest and Fritz Esper) 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 Paul Wiest and Fritz Esper, 328 F.2d 1012, 51 C.C.P.A. 1127 (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 claims 1, 3, 4, 5, 6, 8 and 9 1 of appellants’ application serial No. 783,145 filed December 29, 1958, for “Magnetic Material.” No claim has been allowed.

Appellants’ invention relates to an anisotropic magnetic material in the form of a sintered body which consists essentially of particles of a metal oxide having the composition recited in illustrative appealed claim 3:

“As an anisotropic magnetic material, a sintered body consisting essentially of particles of at least one metal oxide sintered to each other, said metal oxide corresponding to the formula M0.6Fe2C>3, wherein M represents at least one metal selected from the group consisting of Ba, Sr and Pb, said sintered body having a density of up to 4.80 grams per cubic centimeter and an intrinsic coercive force of at least 3300 Oersted and said sintered particles having a size of up to 1 g.”

Appellants’ magnetic material is said to be capable of substantially retaining its magnetization even upon and after exposure to very low temperatures, 'i. e. the material is capable of withstanding exposure to a temperature of -40° C with only a slight decrease of its magnetic flux or induction.

Appellants concede that their invention relates to an anisotropic magnetic material in the form of a sintered body which consists of particles of metal oxide having the composition recited in the appealed claims, which composition, per se, is old. However, appellants rely for patentability of the composition on a combination of three recited characteristic features:

1. A density of the sintered body of anisotropic magnetic material which will be up to 4.80 grams per cubic centimeter;
2. An intrinsic coercive force of at least 3300 Oersted; and
3. A size of the individual sintered particles which is up to one micron.

Appellants in their application state that it is preferred to grind the pre-sintered oxides, in preparing the magnetic material, to a fineness of at least one micron. Modifying agents or additives, such as Fe203, manganese, bismuth, BaSOd, B203, As203, Sb205 and others are said to “facilitate in many cases the production of sintered anisotropic magnetic bodies which possess the essential characteristics according to the present invention, namely, a density not exceeding 4.80 grams per cubic centimeter and an intrinsic coercive force of at least 3300 Oersted.” These essential characteristics, appellants state, “are primarily obtained by controlling and modifying the composition, and the pressure, grinding and sintering conditions during the production of the sintered magnetic body.”

The references relied on by the examiner and the board are:

Gorier et al. 2,762,778 Sept. 11, 1956
Sixtus 3,001,943 Sept. 26, 1961
Philips (British) 747,737 Apr. 11, 1956

*1014 The Gorter et al. patent relates to magnetically anisotropic permanent magnets and to methods of producing same. In one embodiment of their invention, the patentees employ material “which is in a finely-divided state, for example, particles less than 10m and preferably less than 5m and place the same in a sufficiently mobile condition so that the particles can be oriented by a magnetic field.” In one example a material is obtained which has “a field strength of disappearance IHC of 3225 Oersteds, a (BH)max value of 0.99 X 10° and an ‘apparent density’ of 4.41.”

The Sixtus patent relates to an improved heat treatment for increasing the coercive force and the maximum useable magnetic energy of permanent magnetic materials which consist of a combination of iron oxide and one or more metal oxides. The anisotropic magnetic materials in the Sixtus patent are said to be less susceptible to the demagnetizing influence of stray fields, shocks, and temperature changes. In the course of the patentee’s process, slugs of a metal oxide are crushed and ground until the particles are of “a micron or so in greatest dimension.”

The Philips patent relates to methods of manufacturing permanent magnets. It teaches that materials can be provided with magnetically anisotropic properties in various ways, “for example, by subjecting the material in the form of fine particles of a size smaller than 10m, preferably smaller than 5m, in a state in which the particles are sufficiently moving to permit magnetic orientation to the action of an external magnetic field having a field strength of more than 100 Oersted, preferably more than 700 Oersted, and by subsequently compressing the particles to form a coherent body the magnetic field preferably being maintained during compression.”

The examiner rejected the appealed claims as unpatentable over Gorter et al. in view of Philips and Sixtus. He took the view that there is but one difference between appellants’ claims and the subject matter disclosed by the references which difference, viz. that appellants’ material has an intrinsic coercive force of at least 3300 Oersted while the highest intrinsic force shown by the references is 3225 Oersted, he regarded as insignificant. The board, in affirming the examiner, stated:

-x -x -x-
“Example 8 of the Gorter et al. patent shows a material having a density of 4.41 and an intrinsic force of 3225 oersteds. As for the particle size, it is stated in the patent (column 2, lines 19 to 24) that, the particles should be less than 10-M and preferably less than 5m-
“Further elucidation of the matter of particle size is found in the Sixtus patent, which suggests a. particle size of one micron in maximum dimension. Sixtus does not. assert that he is the originator of a material having a particle size of this dimension, and it may be assumed that particles of this size were previously known in the art, as in connection with the Gorter et al. material. It is noted that the discussion in Sixtus of particle size may be correlated with the other two patents cited because Sixtus, refers to a single crystal dimension, in the first paragraph of his Example I, just as Gorter et al. refer to-single crystals in column 2, lines 40' to 42. Moreover, Philips emphasizes on page 2, lines 4 to 9, that fine particles be utilized in order to-obtain a high intrinsic coercive-force.
“With the indicated express, teaching in the Sixtus patent regarding particle size, we consider it. quite obvious to a person of ordinary skill in this art to make a magnetic material in accordance with the last sentence of Example 8 of' Gorter et al. having a particle size-up to 1m.
“Appellants have not demonstrated that the difference between, the coercive force of the Gorter et al.. material (3225 oersteds) and appel— *1015 lants’ claimed lower limit of 3300 oersteds, a difference of less than 3%, is in any way significant. X -X X »

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328 F.2d 1012, 51 C.C.P.A. 1127, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-paul-wiest-and-fritz-esper-ccpa-1964.