Application of Richard W. Muchmore

433 F.2d 824, 58 C.C.P.A. 719
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedNovember 25, 1970
DocketPatent Appeal 8356
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 433 F.2d 824 (Application of Richard W. Muchmore) 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 Richard W. Muchmore, 433 F.2d 824, 58 C.C.P.A. 719 (ccpa 1970).

Opinion

LANE, Judge.

This appeal is from the decision of the Patent Office Board of Appeals, which affirmed the examiner’s rejection of all claims in appellant’s application serial No. 309,384, filed September 17, 1963, for “Heat Treatment Process.” We affirm.

The specification states that cross-linking of crystalline polymers substantially reduces the ultimate elongation 1 of such polymers, the degree of reduction being related to the degree of cross-linking. It also states that the addition of fillers, particularly reinforcing fillers, to cross-linked crystalline polymers further reduces ultimate elongation. Foaming such polymers, with or without fillers, is also said to affect elongation adversely.

Appellant’s invention, as broadly described in the specification, is a process for improving or restoring polymer elongation properties, which have been reduced by cross-linking, foaming, addition of fillers, or a combination of these factors. The process is a simple one, comprising heating a shaped object made from such a polymer to a temperature above the crystalline melting point and then rapidly cooling or quenching the object. The specification states, “However, in general and not by way of limitation, a cooling rate of at least 250 °C. per minute should be used.” None of the claims on appeal recite this minimum cooling rate.

All of the claims before us stand rejected for obviousness under 35 U.S.C. § 103. Some of the claims stand additionally rejected under 35 U.S.C. § 112, a rejection which our disposition of this case renders it unnecessary for us to consider. However, because there is sometimes a close relationship between indefiniteness *825 under § 112, second paragraph, and obviousness under § 103, we point out that there was no rejection for indefiniteness based on the presence of the word “rapidly” in the claims, the importance of which word will become apparent shortly.

We analyze the claims in two groups, choosing a narrow claim from each group as representative. Since we agree with the board’s conclusion of obviousness as to these narrow claims, the broader claims must likewise be obvious.

Representative of the group of claims reciting the presence of a filler in the polymer is claim 14, which depends from claim 33. Written in independent form, claim 14 reads:

A process comprising heating a shaped article comprising cross-linked crystalline polyethylene containing an inorganic filler to a temperature above its crystalline melting temperature and
rapidly cooling said article to a temperature below its crystalline melting temperature. (Emphasis added.)

The board found this claim obvious over Precopio et al., 2 which discloses the use of various inorganic fillers in cross-linked crystalline polyethylene and polyethylene blends. Precopio describes a method of fabricating articles of filled polyethylene, including the steps of heating the material to a temperature above the crystalline melting point, and then (as least impliedly) allowing it to cool. No rate of cooling is specified.

Appellant states in his brief that “The primary difference between the present invention and the prior art may be stated in two words: rapid cooling.” This limitation, he contends, renders the claimed invention unobvious. The board disagreed, saying:

Since we are not convinced that rapid cooling gives any materially improved results over ordinary cooling, as shown by Precopio et al, we conclude that the claims are not patentable over this reference, under 35 U.S.C. 103. (Emphasis ours.)

Implicit in this language is the board’s preliminary conclusion that appellant was obliged to present convincing evidence of superior results in order for the claims to be held unobvious over Precopio. In view of the facts that (1) the claimed process is very similar to Precopio’s in terms of steps, materials and objectives, and (2) there was no definite theoretical basis from which practical advantages of appellant’s process could be deduced with any degree of certainty, we find that the board was correct in requiring a demonstration of unobviousness through evidence, although not necessarily evidence of unexpectedly superior physical or chemical properties. 3 The route chosen by appellant to demonstrate unobviousness in this case was by proof of unexpectedly superior elongation properties obtained with his method as compared to those obtained through prior art methods. Appellant relied on evidence in the form of examples in the specification and an affidavit submitted after the board’s first decision and considered by the board in its opinion on reconsideration.

Turning first to the specification examples, example 1 and its accompanying table describe experiments wherein the process of claim 14 was performed using a high density polyethylene, two samples of which contained silica fillers in different proportions, and two of which contained antimony trioxide fillers in different proportions. Ultimate elongation readings at 22°C. were from 140% to 799%, depending largely on the degree of cross-linking in the polyethylene, which in turn was a function of the radiation dose applied before the process of the claim was performed. For a 20 megarad dose, for example, the ultimate elongation readings at 22 °C. were from *826 424% to 509%. 4 Example 3 and its accompanying table describe the results of experiments wherein the polyethylene of example 1 contained carbon black, an inorganic reinforcing filler. Ultimate elongation measurements of from 440% to 475% were obtained.

We turn now to the affidavit submitted by appellant and considered by the board. It describes a comparison experiment involving application of the claimed process and a slow-cooling process to a particular polyethylene containing a particular proportion of a particular silica filler. The claimed process was performed by heating to 150° and immediately quenching in a dry iceglycerine mixture at -75 °C. Ultimate elongation was more than three times higher using the claimed process.

Looking now to Precopio, we find that he presents about 30 examples wherein his process is applied to compositions containing various polyethylenes, inorganic fillers and curing agents. Twelve of these examples report ultimate elongations of 400% or higher, up to 715%, all at room temperature, which is approximately the temperature recited in appellant’s examples.

All the foregoing points to the conclusion that, while some specific processes within claim 14 (e. g., the one described in the affidavit) might be said to yield unexpectedly superior results over Precopio’s process, the totality of processes covered by the claim, as a class, do not.

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Bluebook (online)
433 F.2d 824, 58 C.C.P.A. 719, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-richard-w-muchmore-ccpa-1970.