Application of Simon L. Ruskin

354 F.2d 395, 53 C.C.P.A. 872
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedMarch 10, 1966
DocketPatent Appeal 7451
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 354 F.2d 395 (Application of Simon L. Ruskin) 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 Simon L. Ruskin, 354 F.2d 395, 53 C.C.P.A. 872 (ccpa 1966).

Opinions

ALMOND, Judge.

Simon L. Ruskin appeals from the decision of the Board of Appeals affirming the rejection of claims 13-17 of appellant’s application1 for “Fossil Fuels.” No claims have been allowed. The sole rejection is lack of utility under 35 U.S.C. § 101 because of inoperativeness.

The subject matter here claimed is a method for increasing the energy release of fossil fuels such as coal and petroleum upon combustion.

Claim 13, which is sufficient for purposes of this opinion, reads as follows:

The process of treating a fossil fuel to increase its energy release on subsequent combustion comprising passing said fuel in a fluid suspension under a pressure of about 150 to about 300 psi through a magnetic field of about 10,000 Gauss for a time sufficient to substantially increase the diamagnetic properties of said fuel.

The following references were relied upon:

Black et al. 2,845,388 July 29,1958 Selwood, Magnetochemistry 407 (1956)

Appellant’s claims have been rejected solely upon the ground that the process is inoperative for the purpose alleged and therefore lacks utility. It appears from the record that the examiner appropriately apprised the appellant as to his doubt concerning the operability of the process. This doubt seems to have been engendered by several factors: (1) The generally speculative nature of the scientific field to which the claimed subject matter relates; (2) the rather grandiose words used in certain instances to describe the results achieved by the invention, and (3) the absence of even one example containing data supporting the statements as to the results obtained by the invention. A request by the examiner for comparative data in support of appellant’s allegations of utility was not complied with. The Board of Appeals affirmed, finding that the examiner entertained a reasonable doubt that the process was operative for the purpose alleged and that such doubt had not been removed by the production of proof relating thereto.

The issue presented by this appeal is whether one of ordinary skill in the art would be satisfied that the process as disclosed and claimed is operative.

A process is operative if it produces its intended result. Although there was perhaps some misconception on the part of the examiner and the board as to what was “the intended result” of appellant’s process, it appears to us that it was to increase the energy release of fossil fuel upon combustion. [397]*397There are isolated statements in the specification to the effect that the energy release is “vastly enhanced” and that the claimed process provides a 2 to 20-fold increase in the available energy of fossil fuel. However, considering that the degree of utility is immaterial (see our discussion in In re Nelson, 280 F.2d 172, 47 CCPA 1031, we believe that a process which would produce an increase in the energy release of fossil fuel upon combustion would be an operative process within the meaning of section 101.

Generally stated, the specification describes a number of transformations which occur in the molecular structure of fossil fuels when exposed to a magnetic field having a strength of about 5,000-10,000 Gauss either alone or in conjunction with gamma irradiation. The following excerpt from the specification describes these transformations in detail:

To accomplish my invention I proceed to disrupt the colloidal masses and subject these particles to diamagnetic dispersion so that they become milled to particles of 2 to 4 microns. By this procedure of diamagnetic milling, a substantial part of the symmetrical molecular structures become antisymmetrical and at this stage greatly enhanced release of energy occurs during combustion. To secure a still greater combustion effect, I may irradiate these small particles with gamma irradiation from an isotope source. Irradiation from 1 million R to 400 million R or more may be employed with increasing energy availability on combustion.
In effecting combustion of these carbon compounds, I secure free orbital circulation of the electrons and with it higher thermal activity. To do this I try to create the most favorable conditions for molecular rearrangements and atomic nuclear rearrangements. Generally, one thinks of the nucleus as strongly coupled to both electron spin and electron orbital motion. These effects are secondary in molecules because the chemical bonds suppress the free orbital circulation of the electrons and pair off the electron spins. Under the influence of my diamagnetic dispersion, a slight shift in resonance frequency is produced which may also be called a chemical shift, depending on the bonding, particularly in the presence of pi bonding. The electron spin coupling leads to an indirect spin coupling of one nucleus with other nuclei in the same molecule and may be manifested through structure on the resonance lines. Chemical shifts also depend on such nuclear electronic environment as the ionic character of the chemical bonds and the magnetic anisotropy of the molecules. The electrostatic interacting will also produce paramagnetic shifts, particularly those caused by hydrogen bonding. Under these conditions, chemical interactions occur with even explosive violence and great liberation of energy. One might in a way compare it with a more controlled release of atomic and molecular energy.
The increased reactivity also leads to the ready formation of peroxides with high release of energy. Thus anthracine derivatives readily form, under the conditions of my process, peroxides with oxygen, particularly in the 9-10 position.

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Application of Simon L. Ruskin
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Bluebook (online)
354 F.2d 395, 53 C.C.P.A. 872, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-simon-l-ruskin-ccpa-1966.