Application of Robert D. Broadley

404 F.2d 616, 56 C.C.P.A. 779
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedDecember 19, 1968
DocketPatent Appeal 8013
StatusPublished

This text of 404 F.2d 616 (Application of Robert D. Broadley) 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 Robert D. Broadley, 404 F.2d 616, 56 C.C.P.A. 779 (ccpa 1968).

Opinion

WORLEY, Chief Judge.

Broadley alleges reversible error in the decision of the Board of Appeals affirming the examiner’s rejection of claims 1-6 1 as unpatentable over Lewis 2 in view of Midgley 3 under 35 U.S.C. § 103.

The invention relates to a high capacity, 4 low boiling, azeotropic refrigerant composition consisting of difluoro-me thane (CH2F2; boiling point of -51.7° C.) and monochloropentafluoroe-thane (C2F5C1; boiling point of -38.7° C.), as well as to a method of refrigerating using that composition. It appears from the record that azeotropic compositions — ones in which the vapor composition is the same as the boiling liquid composition with which it is in equilibrium — -are advantageous refrigerants compared to non-azeotropic multicomponent mixtures since fractionation or separation of the components of the composition, with attendant increase in condenser pressures and overall loss of efficiency, does not occur during the refrigeration cycle. Appellant’s azeotropic compositions consisting of 30-33 mol % C2F5C1 exhibit a constant, minimum boiling point of -57.3° C., whereas mixtures consisting of 13-65% C2F5C1 have boiling points differing only slightly — about 0.7° C. or less — from that of the azeo-trope. According to appellant, his compositions boil at temperatures lower than the boiling point of either pure component, and thus exhibit a negative deviation from Raoult’s law, an empirical rule to the effect that boiling points and vapor pressures of two-component mixtures vary with concentration between the val *617 ues for the pure components. It appears that the high capacity of appellant’s compositions relative to that of either component is due to the fact that the compositions are azeotropic and boil at a lower temperature than either component alone,

Olaim lis representative-Vw/IaxIII JL lo X cUl cocil bw L1V v •

, ... 1. A low boiling composition consisting of a mixture of difluorometh-ane and monochloropentafluoroe-thane, in which mixture the mol percent of monochloropentafluoroethane is substantially m the range of 13-65.

The examiner noted that Lewis discloses an essentially azeotropic refrigerant composition consisting of 20-40 mol percent of 1, l-difluoroeíftcme and 60-80 mol percent of the heretofore men-tinned C2F„C1. The actual azeotrope, formed at 69 mol percent C2F5C1, has a minimum boiling point of -41.3" C„ and thus exhibits a negative deviation from Raoult’s Law. Observing that Lewis does not disclose the use of CH2F2 in refrigerant compositions or as a component of an azeotropic mixture, the examiner turned to Midgley, who discloses that CH2F2, C2F5C1 or CH3CHF2, among many other fluorohydrocarbons, each may be used individually as refrigerants 5 and also shows the boiling point of each of those compounds in his figures 1 and 2. In the examiner’s view, it “would be obvious to one having ordinary skill in the art to substitute * * * [CH2F2]. for the * * * [CH3CH2] of Lewis with the expectation of obtaining suitable results” in view of the fact ill /n tt -n • i i i • t • that CH2F2 is a known low boiling* refrigerant and ig the adjacent lower homo. jQg of CH¡¡CHF2- Quite evidently, the examiner felt that the homologous relationship between CH2f2 and CH3CHF2 wouW be suffident in and of itself to enabk one of ordinary skill to predict that CH2F2 and C2F5C1, like the known CH3CHF2 and C2F5C1, would form a useful azeotropic refrigerant composition. The board agreed.

Appellant contends here, as below, that notbia? “ P"" ar* ^ reco"d gests that CH2F2 and C2.F?C1 would form an azeotropic composition possessing hl*h refrigeration capacity.^ Indeed, apPellant£ urges that there is no known basis, for Pr^ietmg the formation of an ^eotrope between two given fluorohydrocarbons. In support of that argument, he points to the Kvalnes patent 6 cited by him in his brief before the board, as well as to certain proprietary data appearing in the same brief. 7 It *618 is appellant’s position that he has established that the mere fact of homology between CH2F2 and CH3CHF2 would be of no material assistance to one in the art in determining or predicting a priori the proclivity of CH2F2 to form an azeotrope with C2F5C1, while the examiner has offered no evidence to support the bare assertion that homology would be of assistance in that regard.

The board acknowledged that appellant “documents the unpredictable nature of determining azeotropic pairs of compounds” in his brief before it, thus apparently accepting the comparisons made by appellant and the statements of Kvalnes as factual and accurate. 8 Like the examiner, however, the board found it could “give no weight to appellant’s argument that the determination of azeo-tropic mixtures is empirical in nature.” The only reason each assigned was that “the claims are not limited to azeo-tropic mixtures.”

Strictly speaking, of course, the examiner and board are correct in observing that none of appellant’s claims is directed to a true azeotropic composition consisting of 30-33% C2F5C1 and 67-70% CH2F2. But it appears to us that appellant also is correct in stating that all his claims are directed to compositions which are, for all intents and purposes, essentially azeotropic in nature and which possess the desirable features, e. g. negligible fractionation, of azeo-tropic compositions. 9 As appellant points out, his specification states:

* * * It has also been found that mixtures consisting of difluoromethane and monoehloropentafluoroethane substantially in the range of 13-65% monoehloropentafluoroethane have boiling points differing only slightly from the azeotropic composition. Compositions within this range will exhibit only negligible fractionation on boiling and represent useful refrigerants. * * *
* -X* -X* * * *
* * * The 13-65% chloropenta-fluoroethane compositions indicated *619 each has a boiling temperature variation of less than 0.75° C., from the minimum boiling minus 57.3° C. azeo-trope composition. As compositions containing 13-65% C2F5CI all boil between about -56.6° C and -57.3° C., representing a maximum boiling temperature variation within 0.75° C., no significant fractionation occurs on distillation of any compositions within this range, and all such compositions are suited for use as refrigerants. ******
The system formed by herein mixtures of difluoromethane and monochloropentafluoroethane provides a broad range of mixture compositions which boil at substantially constant temperature and give a constant boiling composition.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Graham v. John Deere Co. of Kansas City
383 U.S. 1 (Supreme Court, 1966)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
404 F.2d 616, 56 C.C.P.A. 779, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-robert-d-broadley-ccpa-1968.