Application of Victor A. J. Van Lint and Park H. Miller, Jr

354 F.2d 674, 53 C.C.P.A. 844
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedJanuary 13, 1966
DocketPatent Appeal 7525
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 354 F.2d 674 (Application of Victor A. J. Van Lint and Park H. Miller, Jr) 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 Victor A. J. Van Lint and Park H. Miller, Jr, 354 F.2d 674, 53 C.C.P.A. 844 (ccpa 1966).

Opinion

MARTIN, Judge.

Appellants appeal from the decision of the Board of Appeals affirming the examiner’s rejection, as obvious over the prior art, of claims 2 and 4 through 10 of their application, serial No. 687,806, filed October 2, 1957, for Information Storage Device. No claims are allowed.

The invention relates to an information storage device which utilizes the property of superconductivity possessed by certain metals and alloys. The application points out that at low temperatures approaching absolute zero (0 degrees Kelvin), such materials go through a transition into a superconducting state in which the electrical resistance has a value approaching zero, thereby becoming perfect or nearly perfect electrical conductors. That change, from the normal to the superconducting state, is reversible and takes place at a critical temperature which depends-upon the material and the magnetic field intensity to which it is exposed. Superconducting material is described as “generally an effective electromagnetic shield.” However, the application of a magnetic field exceeding a certain critical strength will destroy the conductivity of a material and eliminate the shielding effect.

Appellants further state:

* * * We have now discovered that a thin superconducting film having a magnetic field producing means such as a length of wire conductor or an exciting coil on one side and a signal pickup means such as a coil on the other side when constructed as hereinafter set forth, may be utilized as a bi-stable storage or memory device. The adaptability of such a structure as a memory device may be demonstrated by applying positive and negative current pulses to the excitation means and observing the current pulses induced in the pickup means. For example, in a device having an exciting coil and a pickup coil, if very small current pulses are applied to an exciting coil, no current pulses or signals are induced in the pickup. This phenomenon is expected, since a superconducting film is generally an effective electromagnetic shield. As the exciting current is increased, current pulses begin to be induced in the pickup coil. These pulses are apparently due to increments of magnetic flux which penetrate the film and induce currents in the pickup, coil. If a signal pulse is applied to. the exciting coil and then turned off, only a singled [sic] pulse of like polarity is observed in the pickup, coil. The flux which was forced through the film apparently remains there as permanent magnetization. If a series of input pulses of' one polarity are applied to the exciting coil, it will be observed that only the first pulse produces a signal in the pickup coil. If the polarity of' the input pulses is reversed, only the first pulse of opposite polarity pro *676 duces a signal in the pickup coil. This may be explained by a reversal in the direction of the magnetic field which is frozen in the superconducting film. If sufficiently large exciting currents are used, only part of the flux remains frozen into the film. The first exciting pulse of a given polarity will in this case produce a large pulse of like polarity associated with the flux change, followed by a smaller signal of opposite polarity due to the return of part of the flux from the film. Subsequent pulses of like polarity will then produce like and opposite polarity signals of the same magnitude as the initial smaller return signal.
A device of this type may be used as a bi-stable memory device since the film remembers the polarity of a previously existing current pulse by retaining a residual magnetization of that polarity. The information can be read out by applying another pulse to the exciting coil and observing whether a signal appears in the pickup coil.

In the specific device appellants disclose, a thin film of superconducting material less than 3000 Angstrom units 1 thick is formed, as by vacuum deposition, on a supporting plate of insulating material, a flat spirally wound exciting coil is located on one side of the film, and an axially wound cylindrical pickup coil is located on the other side of the plate in general alignment with the exciting coil. A preferred embodiment utilizes a film of lead kept in the superconductive state by immersion of the device in liquid helium, which has a temperature of about 4.2 degrees Kelvin, about three degrees below the critical transition temperature (for superconductivity) of lead.

Concerning the exciting or excitation coil, appellants state:

* * * An excitation coil which produces a flux density of one gauss or less in free space is generally sufficient to penetrate the superconducting film of the present device. This is considerably smaller than the value of the field required to completely destroy the superconductivity of the film.

They further disclose that the current pulse passed through that coil to produce the desired magnetic field may be “about a value of 0.1 ampere.”

Claim 10, accepted as illustrative by both the appellants and the board, reads:

10. An information storage device comprising a thin film of superconducting material having a thickness less than 3,000 Angstrom units, excitation means adjacent one side of said film, means for coupling said excitation means to a source of current pulses, said excitation means being operable in response to the flow of current pulses therethrough to form a magnetic field with components of lines of flux extending normal to the plane of said film and of a strength less than that necessary to destroy the superconductivity of the film but greater than that necessary to cause lines of flux to penetrate through said film, and pickup means fixedly disposed adjacent the other side of said film for detecting changes in the lines of flux which penetrate through said superconducting film, said film extending beyond said pickup means a sufficient distance to shield said pickup means from lines of flux other than those penetrating through said film.

The other appealed claims are somewhat more specific. Among the additional limitations found in those claims are recitations that the film is a lead film of a thickness between about 50 and 200 Angstrom units, that the exciting coil is no more than .010 of an inch from the film, and that the current pulses are about 0.1 ampere or less.

The claims stand rejected as defining subject matter obvious to one of ordinary *677 skill in the art in view of the following publication:

Hewlett, “Superconductivity,” General Electric Review, Yol. 49, No. 6, June 1946, pages 19 to 25.

Reference was also made by the board to:

Standard Handbook for Electrical Engineers, McGraw Hill Book Company, Inc., 1915, page 186.

The Hewlett article provides a general discussion of the phenomenon of superconductivity. It tabulates the elements which can be made superconductive and also states that many alloys and metallic compounds are superconducting at low temperatures. A discussion of the relationships that the temperature of the materials and the magnetic field to which they are exposed bear to superconductivity is included.

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354 F.2d 674, 53 C.C.P.A. 844, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-victor-a-j-van-lint-and-park-h-miller-jr-ccpa-1966.