Application of Roger F. Jones

412 F.2d 241, 56 C.C.P.A. 1293
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJuly 3, 1969
DocketPatent Appeal 8099
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 412 F.2d 241 (Application of Roger F. Jones) 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 Roger F. Jones, 412 F.2d 241, 56 C.C.P.A. 1293 (ccpa 1969).

Opinion

BALDWIN, Judge.

Jones appeals from the Patent Office Board of Appeals decision affirming the examiner’s rejection of claims 1 and 2, the only remaining claims in his application, 1 as unpatentable over Ward, 2 Blake, 3 and Orzechowski, 4 taken in combination, under 35 U.S.C. § 103. 5

THE INVENTION

The invention relates to blends containing polypropylene and anthophyllite asbestos. 6 The specification indicates *242 that articles molded from asbestos-filled polypropylene generally “exhibit enhanced tensile and flexural modulus”; however, under certain circumstances, specifically where the articles are to sustain prolonged exposure to moderately high heat, 7 the asbestos-filled compositions tend to oxidize and degrade more rapidly than unfilled polypropylene. Appellant has discovered that anthophyllite asbestos accelerates the oxidative degradation to a far lesser extent than do other asbestos.

The appealed claims read:

1. As a new composition of matter, a blend of crystalline polypropylene and anthophyllite asbestos, wherein the weight percent of asbestos is from 10% to 85%, together with a small but effective amount of an inhibitor against thermal and oxidative degradation.
2. The composition according to Claim 1 in which the weight percent asbestos is from 30% to 60%.

THE REFERENCES

Ward discloses compositions of asbestos with thermosetting resins, a number of which are listed as being applicable, and all types of asbestos are disclosed as acceptable. The preferred composition, however, comprises phenol-formaldehyde condensation resin with antho-phyllite asbestos which has been chemically treated to eliminate acid soluble metallic constituents. The compositions are intended for use in extremely high temperature situations such as are encountered by rockets. 8 The compositions may be molded for use as an insulating liner or as part of the structure of the rocket tube itself.

Blake discloses lightweight, fireproof construction materials consisting of asbestos, another filler (which is inert) and a plasticizer mixed with a resinous plastic, which may be either thermoset-ting or thermoplastic. The asbestos comprises “about 15 %” of the mixture, is not defined more specifically, but is said to give “to the product its character,” one element of which is increased tensile strength. Polyethylene was specifically tested as one component of the mixture.

Orzechowski is directed to a process for producing highly crystalline polyole-fins, among which are polyethylene and polypropylene. The patent discloses that the crystalline polymers so produced “can be subjected to such aftertreatment as may be desired to fit them for particular uses or to impart desired properties,” for example, the incorporation of antioxidants, stabilizers, plasticizers, pigments, and fillers, such as the silicas.

In addition to the references employed in the rejection, the record includes page 113 of the Condensed Chemical Dictionary, 9 originally cited by the examiner but discarded prior to his final action, and page 136 of the Kirk-Othmer Encyclopedia of Chemical Technology, 10 originally *243 called to the examiner’s attention by appellant and relied on in his brief here as support for certain arguments.

THE REJECTION

The board viewed the examiner’s position as follows:

* * * [S]ince the anthophyllite type has been used as the preferred form of asbestos to fill thermosetting resins for high temperature applications, such as rocket liners, as shown by Ward, and since asbestos generally has been used to fill both thermosetting and thermoplastic resins for a variety of uses, including insulation, it would have been obvious under 35 USC 103' to use the anthophyllite variety of asbestos as the filler in the thermoplastic resins, such as the well-known filled crystalline polypropylene as shown by Orzechowski. The latter is also relied upon to show the use of antioxidants and stabilizers broadly, as claimed, in the resin.

The Blake patent was not mentioned in this statement, but since that patent was relied upon by the examiner to show that it was known to employ asbestos as a filler with thermoplastic or thermoset-ting resins to produce materials having improved tensile strength, we presume that it was also relied upon by the board.

The board apparently considered that the combined references did present a prima facie case of obviousness, since the examiner’s position was sustained without going into the disclosures of the references in detail. The thrust of the opinion was clearly aimed at evaluating the adequacy of the showing of unobvious results. The board determined first that the showing in the specification of improved tensile and flexural modulus was insufficient since there was no comparison of the effects of the different types of asbestos. 11 Appellant’s use of the term “catalyze” to describe the effect of the asbestos in increasing the rate of degradation was then seized upon and combined with Ward’s disclosure that he treated the anthophyllite to remove acid soluble constituents, to justify the conclusion that “some sort of chemical interaction between the asbestos and polypropylene” occurs. Using this conclusion, the board then determined that the showing in Table II of the specification, which did compare the different types of asbestos as to their effect on the rate of heat degradation in blends with polypropylene, was insufficient because the types of asbestos were not adequately identified with regard to their chemical makeup, reasoning that:

[W]e find no identification of the various types of asbestos tested in Table II beyond their general name and the country, state or province in which they are found. It does not appear whether they were used as they naturally occur or whether they were subjected to some form of further selection or chemical treatment such as in Ward.
It is well-known, as indicated by Ward, that asbestos is an impure silicate as it occurs in nature. It is also well-known that it varies in this and many other respects such as physical structure, strength and resistance to heat and to acids and that these differences occur even among various representatives of a particular type. Selection for general uses often is made on the basis of general type characteristics.

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Bluebook (online)
412 F.2d 241, 56 C.C.P.A. 1293, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-roger-f-jones-ccpa-1969.