Application of Sidney Dilnot

319 F.2d 188, 50 C.C.P.A. 1446
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJune 28, 1963
DocketPatent Appeal 6988
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 319 F.2d 188 (Application of Sidney Dilnot) 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 Sidney Dilnot, 319 F.2d 188, 50 C.C.P.A. 1446 (ccpa 1963).

Opinion

WORLEY, Chief Judge.

This appeal is from the decision of the Board of Appeals which rejected claims 1, 11-13, 16, 18, 19, 21 and 22 of appellant’s application 1 entitled “Calcium Silicate Hydrate Products” as unpatentable over the prior art.

The initial decision of the board affirmed the examiner’s rejection of claim 22, presented for the purpose of interference, but reversed the rejection of the remaining claims on the art relied on by the examiner. The board also rejected those claims on two new grounds, one of which involved reliance on a newly cited reference, under the provisions of Rule 196(b). That decision was adhered to on reconsideration. Six method claims are allowed.

The invention relates to light weight construction material, particularly to a calcium silicate hydrate product characterized by a combination of desirable properties, such as low apparent density, high strength and low “moisture movement,” 2 which are not shown in the prior art. The advantageous combination of properties is said to be effected “by carrying out the formation of the calcium silicate hydrate in such a way that it consists of a matrix or web of aerated calcium silicate hydrate surrounding and adhering to the particles of a dispersed light weight porous aggregate.”

The prior art is acknowledged by appellant to teach the following:

Calcium silicate hydrate products, with which the present invention is concerned, are formed conventionally by mixing ground inorganic calcareous substances, which furnish lime or its equivalent as a reactant, and ground inorganic siliceous substances, which furnish silica or its equivalent as a reactant, with water and allowing the mixture to harden under conditions favoring the formation of calcium silicate hydrate. * * The indurating or hardening step is usually carried out, especially after an initial hardening or presetting period, at an elevated temperature and in the presence of an excess of water, generally in the form of saturated steam. A conventional procedure involves heating the preset forms under a pressure of 140 to 150 pounds per square inch of saturated steam. These products are distinguished from ordinary cement products or concrete, because of the elevated temperature employed during the hardening step, by the development of a crystalline calcium silicate hydrate, rather than by the calcium silicate hydrate gel which is formed in the setting or hardening of ordinary cement products or concrete.
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The production of light weight calcium silicate hydrate products has. heretofore been accomplished frequently by incorporating bubbles of air or other gases, usually as a preformed foam, in a mixture of calcareous and siliceous components and wafer, and then hardening the mixture to form a product, a considerable proportion of the volume of which consists of non-communicating voids corresponding to the gas bubbles incorporated in the wet mixture. Such products may be referred to as “aerated calcium silicate hydrate products”. * * *

The method employed by appellant to prepare his calcium silicate hydrate products consists of mixing the several in *190 .gredients which include (1) a calcareous substance, 3 (2) a silicious substance, 4 (3) porous light weight aggregate, 5 and (4) a preformed foam 6 to form a slurry which is cast into molds and hardened. The preferred hardening or induration step consists of heating the article in an •atmosphere of saturated steam at a pressure from 100 to 200 p. s. L, for several hours.

Claims 1, 16, and 22 are representative and read:

“1. In a method for making an indurated, light weight calcium silicate hydrate product, the steps which include: providing a body of a slurry comprising a calcareous component, a siliceous component and water, the amount of water being proportioned to provide a stable slurry; injecting a predetermined volume of a preformed foam under pressure beneath the surface of said body; and agitating the mixture of foam and slurry to •distribute the foam substantially •evenly throughout the body.
“16. An article comprising from about 0.75 to about 1.75 parts by weight of a porous light weight aggregate having an apparent density •of from about 35 to about 65 pounds per cubic foot surrounded by and bonded to about one part of a rigid calcium silicate hydrate matrix, the matrix containing a plurality of small, substantially non-communicating spherical voids and the product being further characterized by a dry bulk density of from about 40 to 45 pounds per cubic foot, a compressive strength when dry of from about 900 to about 1800 pounds per square inch and a moisture movement of from about 0.02 to about 0.05 per cent, said article being produced by indurating in superatmospheric pressure steam an aerated slurry of calcareous and siliceous components and aggregate.
“22. The method of producing a cellular cementitious structure consisting of the steps of, preparing a slurry of cementitious material, generating a stable air foam, continuously introducing said foam into said slurry, and intimately mixing said foam with said slurry as said foam is introduced to produce a substantially uniform dispersion of said foam in said slurry, introducing said mixed foam and slurry into a form of desired configuration, and allowing said mixture to set and harden.”
The references relied on are:
Greider 1,782,384 November 18, 1930
Albert 2,243,369 May 27, 1941
Jahjab. 2,282,199 May 5, 1942
Selden. 2,540,354 February 6, 1951
Dixon et al. 2,864,714 December 16, 1958
(Filed Feb. 9, 1954)

The board rejected all the claims on appeal as unpatentable over Dixon et al., and also as unpatentable- over Jahjah, with reliance on Selden and Albert for the disclosure of limitations found in certain claims.

Jahjah discloses a process for producing cast multicellular concrete blocks and slabs in which the concrete, while in the wet state, is combined with an “aerated foam” creating a product having “an *191 infinite number of uniformly distributed bubbles or cells.” The foam is said to have properties which cause it to persist “even when subjected to agitation in the presence of cement and aggregates as in a concrete mixer.” Jahjah makes his concrete products by first preparing a stiff aqueous foam containing animal glue, ammonia alum, caustic soda, colophene and aluminum powder. The patentee states:

“Thereupon, the foam is measured into a mixer into which is introduced the requisite amount of cement and water, with or without aggregates, to make a mixture for pouring into molds or forms.

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319 F.2d 188, 50 C.C.P.A. 1446, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-sidney-dilnot-ccpa-1963.