Application of Wilhelm Neugebauer, Martha Tomanek and Hans Behmenburg

330 F.2d 353, 51 C.C.P.A. 1138, 141 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 205, 1964 CCPA LEXIS 423
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedApril 9, 1964
DocketPatent Appeal 7097
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 330 F.2d 353 (Application of Wilhelm Neugebauer, Martha Tomanek and Hans Behmenburg) 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 Wilhelm Neugebauer, Martha Tomanek and Hans Behmenburg, 330 F.2d 353, 51 C.C.P.A. 1138, 141 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 205, 1964 CCPA LEXIS 423 (ccpa 1964).

Opinion

RICH, Judge.

This appeal is from the decision of the Patent Office Board of Appeals which affirmed the rejection of claims 126 to 162 in appellants’ application serial No. 662,319, filed May 29, 1957, entitled “Photographic Reproduction.” Thirty-one claims stand allowed.

The invention relates to electrophotography, in particular to chemical compounds which are photoconductive and thus useful as coatings for substrata on which it is desired to reproduce images. The compounds are 2,5-bis (para-aminophenyl) -1,3,4-oxadiazoles.

In electrophotography, a substratum (e. g., paper, glass, metal foil, etc.) is coated with a photoconductive substance (i. e., a substance whose electrical conductivity is dependent upon the amount of light to which it is subjected) to provide a surface upon which images are reproducible. The photoconductive layer, although not light-sensitive per se, is rendered so by applying to the coated article an electrostatic charge (e. g., by *354 corona discharge 1 ). Images to be reproduced are placed atop the charged surface which is exposed to illumination by conventional photographic methods, whereby the coating locally dissipates its charge in proportion to the intensity of illumination. Non-illuminated areas, which retain their charge, are then treated with eleetroscopic powder (e. g., colored synthetic resins) resulting in a visible image which may be transferred to another surface or may be fixed (e. g., by fusing), rendering the powder permanently adherent to the coated substratum.

The rejected claims define electrophotographic articles as well as a method of making them. 2 Claims 129, 130, 131 and 157 are representative (emphasis ours):

“129. An electrophotographic material comprising an electrically conductive support layer and a photoconductive insulating layer, the latter containing a compound having the formula
in which R, Ri, R2, and R3 are selected from the group consisting of hydrogen, alkyl, cycloalkyl, and acyl radicals; and X and Xi are selected from the group consisting of hydrogen and halogen.
“130. An electrophotographic material according to claim 129 in which the photoconductive layer contains a dyestuff sensitizer.
“131. An electrophotographic material according to claim 129 in which the photoconductive layer contains an organic colloid.
“157. A method of making an electrophotographic material which comprises coating an electrically conductive support layer with a photo-conductive insulating layer comprising a 2,5-bis-(p-aminophenyl)-1,3,4-oxadiazole.”

The other rejected claims differ from the above claims in defining the oxadiazole compound with varying degrees of specificity. In article claims 141 to 156, specific oxadiazoles are recited. “Dyestuff sensitizers” according to appellants’ specification are used to extend the sensitivity of the photoconductive layer “into the visible part of the spectrum * * *_» Appellants disclose a host of dyes as applicable including triarylmethanes, xanthenes, thiazines, etc. “Organic colloids” are said to be “advantageous in preparing the photoconductive insulating layers” and may be natural and synthetic resins, synthetic polymers and the like. For what purpose they are “advantageous” is not expressly disclosed, but apparently they provide a fusible medium for fixation of the photoconductive layer after exposure.

The sole ground of rejection is unpatentability over the following reference:

Siegrist et al. 2,765,304 Oct. 2, 1956

In the Siegrist et al. patent, entitled “New Ox-Diazole Compounds and Process for their Manufacture,” the patentees teach various oxadiazoles, the sole statement of utility of which is “for making organic material impenetrable to ultraviolet rays, for the optic brightening of organic material or as an intermediate *355 product for the preparation of dyestuffs.” (Emphasis ours.) Such compounds also “exhibit in solution or when applied to a substratum a green-blue to violet fluorescence in daylight or ultra-violet light.” (Emphasis ours.) Appellants assert, and the Patent Office concedes, there is no teaching in Siegrist et al. that any oxadiazoles possess photoconductive properties. Appellants concede that some of the oxidiazoles of their claims are disclosed by Siegrist et al.

We shall discuss separately the rejeetion of the article claims and method claims.

Article Claims

The Patent Office position is that the reference teaches, or at least suggests, a “backing member” upon which is coated an oxadiazole as ultraviolet brightener; that such “backing member” may be paper which is “organic material”; and that such coated paper would inherently be an article defined by appellants’ claims. Stated another way, the Patent Office position is that appellants’ claims define an article not distinguishable from a coated paper suggested by Siegrist et al.

. The examiner said:

“It is the Examiner’s position that the instant claims recite no new or unobvious article even though the intended use may be different.
“Siegrist et al clearly discloses coating the composition on a ‘backing member’, which is substantially all the structure that is required * * * [by appellants’] claims * * * to be ‘an electrophotographic material’. * * *
“The requirement in the instant claims that the backing member be ‘electrically conductive’ is not seen to define any significant structural distinction since any material is ‘electrically conductive’, even the best insulators known. In any event, note that applicants may employ such backing materials as glass or paper * * *. The obvious and well known use for ultra-violet absorbers and optic brighteners, the utility suggested by the reference * * * is in paints, inks, photographs, and coating compositions in general, for example in the optical brightening of paper. Nor is it deemed unobvious to broadly classify substrates into two distinct categories, i. e. conductive and non-conductive, where there is no apparent reason to limit the reference to non-conductive substrates.”

The board added:

“Appellants rely upon the preamble directed to ‘An electrophotographic material’ to support patent-of [the] article claims * *
_ a£ree with appellants’ interpretation of ^ the preamble which, in our opinion, neither requires specific structure nor suggests a particular function. The term ‘An electrophotographic material’ does no^ indicate what structure other than that specified in the terms of the claims is required nor how said mater^ai is b® employed in an electrophotographic process.

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330 F.2d 353, 51 C.C.P.A. 1138, 141 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 205, 1964 CCPA LEXIS 423, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-wilhelm-neugebauer-martha-tomanek-and-hans-behmenburg-ccpa-1964.