Application of Sutton

211 F.2d 582, 41 C.C.P.A. 816
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedMarch 23, 1954
DocketPatent Appeals 6004
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 211 F.2d 582 (Application of Sutton) 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 Sutton, 211 F.2d 582, 41 C.C.P.A. 816 (ccpa 1954).

Opinion

JOHNSON, Judge.

This is an appeal from the decision of the Board of Appeals of the United States Patent Office affirming the action of the Primary Examiner in finally rejecting claims 21 to 40, inclusive, which are all of the claims of appellants’'application, Serial No. 54,363, for a patent on “Improvements in the Coloration of Cellulose Acetate.” All of the appealed claims are process claims and no claims have been allowed.

Claims 23, 24, 28, 29, 33, 34, and 36 — 40, inclusive, have been rejected as drawn to noneleeted species of appellants’ alleged invention. There is no controversy over this rejection. Those claims will not be considered on their merits by this court. In re Jones, 162 F.2d 638, 34 C.C.P.A., Patents, 1168; In re Kirwan, 171 F.2d 326, 36 C.C.P.A., Patents, 772.

The claims rejected by the Patent Office as unpatentable over the prior art fall into three distinct categories. Claims 25, 26, and 35 are considered by us to be representative of these categories. These claims read as follows :

“25. Process for the coloration of textile material comprising cellulose acetate which process includes the step of contacting the material with a mixture consisting essentially of a vat dyestuff, a sulphoxylic reducing agent, and an alkaline pH regulator of insufficient alkalinity to cause substantial saponification of cellulose acetate under the conditions of the process, subjecting the material to temperatures of the order of 9Q°C.-100°C., and oxidizing the dye *583 stuff, said process being characterized in the omission of addition agents having a pronounced swelling effect on cellulose acetate.
“26. Process for dyeing textile material comprising cellulose acetate which process includes the steps of immersing the material in a dyebath consisting essentially of water, a vat dyestuff, and a sulphoxylic reducing agent, at temperatures of the order of 90°C.-100°C., and for from 10 to 15 minutes, and subsequently oxidizing the dyestuff.
“35. Process for dyeing textile material comprising cellulose acetate which process includes the steps of mechanically impregnating the material with a liquor containing a vat dyestuff and a sulphoxylic agent, steaming the impregnated material under pressure, and then giving it an oxidizing treatment.”

The rest of the claims to be considered on their merits are similar to one of the above claims. Claim 21 is similar to claim 25, differing therefrom in that it does not set out the pH regulator nor the omission of swelling agents, although it does state that there will be no addition of agents capable of affecting substantial saponification of the cellulose acetate. Claim 21 also specifies air oxidizing. Claim 31 is very similar to claim 35, except that it adds a drying step before the steaming step, and it does not require that the steaming be done under pressure. Claim 22 depends on claim 21, claim 27 depends on claim 26 and claim 32 depends on claim 31, each of the dependent claims adding to the parent claim that the sulphoxylic reducing agent used in sodium formaldehyde sulphoxylate. Claim 30 depends on claim 26 and adds that the dye bath also contains an alkaline pH regulator that will not cause substantial saponification of the cellulose acetate.

The reference relied on is: Scull 2,-424,857, July 29,1947.

As is apparent from the above quoted claims, appellants’ alleged invention is for a process for dyeing or coloring a textile material that is wholly or partly of cellulose acetate, with vat dyestuffs. To insure an understanding of appellants’ process and the reference patent we believe that some discussion of vat dyes will be helpful. As shown by the record, the use of vat dyes is desired because they are very fast, resisting fading from both light and extensive washing. However, vat dyes are insoluble and thus cannot be used directly. To use them it is first necessary to reduce them to their colorless or leuco form, in which form they are soluble in an alkaline solution and can be adsorbed by various types of material. There are two common methods used in applying vat dyes to the desired material. In one method the leuco form of the dye is mixed in an alkaline solution and the material is immersed in this solution to adsorb the leuco form of the dye. Then the material is removed and subjected to an oxidizing action which converts the leuco form in the material back to the insoluble dye. An alternate method is to form a dye bath of a suspension of the unreduced vat dye and an alkaline reducing agent that is inactive below a certain temperature. The material to be dyed is placed in the dye bath and then, with or without passing through rollers to remove some of the excess suspension, it is passed through a drying step to remove the volatile. It is then placed in a steam chamber where the reducing agent is activated and the dyestuff reduced to its leuco form and adsorbed by the material. Then the material is subjected to an oxidizing treatment to convert the leuco form in the material back to the insoluble dye. These methods are apparently used to dye textile material composed of cotton or regenerated cellulose. However, they have not been satisfactory for the dyeing of material composed of cellulose acetate because of excessive saponification of that material by the alkaline baths. This saponification destroys some of the desirable characteristics of the cellulose acetate, in effect, changing it to regenerated cellulose or *584 viscose. The dyeing art has sought for some method of applying these dyes to cellulose acetate without destroying its desirable properties. This is the problem to which appellants’ application is directed as is the patent to Scull, cited by the Patent Office.

Appellants’ process is for the coloration of a textile material with the vat dyes. The textile material can be wholly cellulose acetate or it can be a combination of some other material and a percentage of cellulose acetate. The process requires that the material be contacted with a dyebath that consists of a vat dyestuff, a sulphoxylic reducing agent and water, and it may contain an alkaline pH regulator. At some stage of the process, either while being contacted with the dyebath (claim 26) or after having contacted the dyebath, the material is subjected to temperatures of the order of 90°C.-100°C. The material is then given an oxidizing treatment to oxidize the dyestuff. The specification states that this process is carried out with little or no saponification of the cellulose material, but this limitation is only included in three of the claims (claims 21, 25, and 30) in terms of lack of “substantial saponification” under the conditions of the process.

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Bluebook (online)
211 F.2d 582, 41 C.C.P.A. 816, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-sutton-ccpa-1954.