Application of Ulf C. H. Jacobson

407 F.2d 890, 56 C.C.P.A. 982
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedMarch 6, 1969
DocketPatent Appeal 8100
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 407 F.2d 890 (Application of Ulf C. H. Jacobson) 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 Ulf C. H. Jacobson, 407 F.2d 890, 56 C.C.P.A. 982 (ccpa 1969).

Opinion

RICH, Judge.

This appeal is from the decision of the Patent Office Board of Appeals affirming the rejection of all claims in application serial No. 200,593, filed April 30, 1962, entitled “Processing of Polymerizates,” a continuation-in-part of serial No. 690,259, filed October 15, 1957.

THE INVENTION

The “processing” with which the application is concerned is a method of “dry-blending” thermoplastic materials, to be used for molding or extrusion, with the usual plasticizers, stabilizers, color *891 ing, fillers, lubricants, and the like. Although the plasticizers and some of the other materials may be liquids, they are added at such a rate and under such conditions that the mixture remains substantially dry in appearance. It is explained that certain prior art processes produced a hot gelled mass which, after cooling, had to be disintegrated or granulated to get a materia] suitable for use in molding or extrusion and it is stated as an object to avoid such gelling with the necessity of subsequent granulation. It is further explained that some thermoplastic materials, particularly “emulsion polymerizates,” polyvinyl chloride for example, are fine powders unsuitable for use in extruders as well as difficult to blend with plasticizer, etc., and that a granular product must be produced therefrom with which to feed the extruder. It is desired to get such a product without producing an aggregate which has to be ground up or granulated and appellant does this in a blender.

A brief description of appellant’s Example I will serve to illustrate. A blender consisting of a container with an agitator blade in its bottom, similar in construction to the common kitchen “Waring Blendor,” is used. This industrial version, however, has a capacity of 100 liters (about 26.5 gallons) and is driven by a 20 horsepower motor. Polyvinyl chloride emulsion polymerizate in the amount of 25 kg with minor amounts of other dry ingredients are charged into it and the rotor started at 1400 rpm while 7.5 kg of liquid plasticizer (dioctyl phthalate) is added in a continuous stream during a 5-minute period. Rotor speed is then reduced to 700 rpm and, after 2 minutes, 5 kg additional plasticizer is added during 5 more minutes. After 2 minutes more, the product is discharged “as a dry, free-flowing granular material which could be processed in an extrude[r]” to form electrical cable insulation. It is said that by this technique up to 100'% by weight of plasticizer and other liquids can be added without getting a wet or sticky product.

Heat is an essential part of this processing. According to the disclosure, the necessary heat, which makes the polymer receptive to plasticizer and also causes the powder particles to agglomerate to a controlled extent to form larger granules, can be produced in the blender from the friction between the particles and between the particles and the rotor. However, the specification does not limit the source of heat to the energy produced by the rotor and explains that two other sources may be used additionally, even preferably. One is the use of a heating jacket on the blender whereby the "time required for heating the charge may be reduced” and the other is that “the plasticizer and other liquid constituents may be preheated to a temperature of about 100 °C, for example.” In Example I there is no mention of outside sources of heat so it is assumed the necessary heat is produced by friction. In Example IV, on the other hand, the blender has a jacket heated to 130°C and the plasticizer is heated to 130°C before addition. The rotor in that example is run at 700 rpm.

It is important to the process of the invention not to heat too much. The desired range is disclosed as about 60 to 170 °C, which is “below the gelling temperature of the mixture.” The specification explains:

Since the material does not gell in the blender, no disintegration or granulation of the product is necessary as it is discharged in granular form.

THE CLAIMS

There are two independent claims from which all others depend. Claim 10 is the more specific and reads (our emphasis):

10. A process for forming free-flowing granules from thermoplastic powder which comprises maintaining the powder in a confined zone as a rapidly moving suspension and at an elevated temperature below the gelling temperature of the thermoplastic, resulting from the heat generated at least in part by frictional and shearing forces between the powder particles *892 and adding a liquid plasticizer to the suspension whereby the particles are fused to form granules containing plasticizer.

Claim 1, the other independent claim, is claim 10 with the italicized words omitted. The dependent claims, 2-9 and 11-13, will be discussed later.

THE REJECTION

The examiner rejected all claims, 1-13, “under 35 USC 102 as fully met by” or “met by” (a less emphatic legal equivalent) the following references:

Sandler 2,477,009 July 26, 1949
Samler 2,718,471 Sept. 20,1955

In affirming, the board said:

We have considered appellant’s several arguments but will sustain the rejection of all the claims on each of the references. While the claims appear directly readable upon the references, except for dependent claim 13 specifying partial vacuum; they are, in any event, clearly unpatentable under section 35 U.S.C. 103. In re Pye et al., 148 USPQ 426 [53 CCPA 877, 355 F.2d 641 (1966)].

Before us, the Solicitor for the Patent Office contends that the issues presented by the appeal encompass both anticipation under section 102 and obviousness under section 103, in view of the board’s express reference to that section.

Appellant, on the contrary, says “the only rejection of the claims for review by this Honorable Court is that as fully met by the Samler and Sandler references under 35 U.S.C. 102.” It seems to be his position that we are precluded from considering anything else — specifically, whether any claim is unpatentable for obviousness under section 103 — because “the observation by the Board that the claims were unpatentable under Section 103 did not constitute a new rejection by the Board under Section 103 since there was no compliance with Rule 196 (b).” The solicitor says the board’s above-quoted statement does comply with that rule.

Is a Section 108 Rejection Before Us?

Preliminarily, it seems desirable to resolve this question since the protagonists are taking diametrically opposed positions, it involves an important procedural matter of frequent occurrence, and the propriety of the rejection of certain claims depends on it.

The board cited In re Pye in the above-quoted passage. The most relevant passage in Pye reads as follows:

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407 F.2d 890, 56 C.C.P.A. 982, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-ulf-c-h-jacobson-ccpa-1969.