General Chemical Co. v. Selden Co.

60 F.2d 144, 14 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 47, 1932 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1313
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 17, 1932
DocketNo. 2358
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 60 F.2d 144 (General Chemical Co. v. Selden Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
General Chemical Co. v. Selden Co., 60 F.2d 144, 14 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 47, 1932 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1313 (W.D. Pa. 1932).

Opinion

MeVICAR, District Judge.

The court finds the following facts and makes the following conclusions of law:

(1) The plaintiff, the General Chemical Company, is a corporation of the state of New York. The defendant, the Selden Company, is a corporation of the state of Delaware, having an established place of business in Pittsburgh, Pa., where the acts complained of are alleged to have been committed.

(2) The patent in suit is No. 1,371,004 for certain new and useful improvements in oxidation of sulfur dioxid and catalyst therefor. The patent states that it relates to the production and use of a commercially efficient catalyst or contact substance for the production of sulfuric anhydrid from sulfur dioxid and oxygen. The patent was applied for October 9,1914, and was granted March 8, 1921, to the plaintiff, the as-signee thereof, who has continued since to be its owner. The issues are validity and infringement.

(3) Prior to the patent in suit the' only successful commercial catalyst in use was platinum on an asbestos carrier.

(4) It is stated in the patent in suit that the De Haen patent, No. 687,834, described a substance of the general class of vanadium catalysts; however, the product of that patent does not convert more than 84 per cent, of the sulfur dioxid into sulfurie anhydrid, which makes it useless for commercial purposes.

(5) In referring to the invention claimed in the patent in suit, it is stated:

“Broadly considered, this invention consists in providing a carrier for a vanadium [145]*145containing substance, which carrier has a fineness of division very much greater than that of similar carriers heretofore employed. So far as we are aware no vanadium cata-lyses have been used or described in which the carrier was less than 5,000 microns in maximum dimension. As such carriers we have used ground pumice, kieselguhr, precipitated silicic acid, stannic oxid, or stannic hydroxid, or mixtures of all or any of them; we prefer to employ these materials of a degree of fineness such that the individual particles do not exceed twenty microns and are preferably in the neighborhood of one micron in diameter, although we are not limited to degrees of fineness falling within such limits, as coarser particles of carrier may be used and a large increase of conversion still be obtained. When we speak in our claims of a carrier very finely divided we mean to indicate a carrier in the here defined finely divided form, that is to say so much finer than those hitherto employed for vanadium catalysts that the catalyst of which it forms a part produces or is suited to produce, a commercially substantial increase of conversion over those hitherto known; but not so coarse that it is not capable of granulation. Particles of carrier should, therefore, not have a diameter larger than sixty (60) microns.”

(6) In referring to collateral or subsidiary steps in the making of the catalysts, it is stated in the patent in suit that — -

“In developing this feature of the invention wo have discovered several collateral or subsidiary new steps in the production of a suitable vanadium catalyst: for example, the addition of potassium hydrate or sodium hydrate, or the carbonate or the sulfate or the nitrate of these, in order to protect the new catalyst from deteriorating in catalytic activity; finally, the removal of hygroscopic properties by heating such catalyst in the presence of air and in the absence of sulfur dioxid.”

(7) As to the form of the vanadium in the patent in suit, it is stated:

“The form in which we use the vanadium may be that of vanadio oxid or of ammonium vanadate, or of potassium vanadate, with or without, as the case may be, the addition of potassium or sodium hydrate, carbonate, sulfate, or nitrate, so as to stabilize the catalyst by overcoming any hygroscopic properties which it may possess.”

The patent in suit also states that a suitable binding agent may be used.

(8) Two examples of carrying the invention into effect are given in the patent in suit. They are:

“Example 1: Mix 200 parts of moist pumice powder (the grains of which have a diameter of one micron) with 14 parts of ammonium vanadate; granulate this mixture and heat the resulting granular product to about 300° C. in the presence of air until ammonia is no longer given off, and then heat to 440 ° O. in the presence of gas containing or consisting of sulfur dioxid, until substantially no further change in the condition of the particles takes place. This product is now ready for use as a catalyst in the production of sulfuric anhydrid from gases containing sulfur dioxid. and oxygen in the usual contact or catalytic process. Any other suitable carrier may be used in place of the pumice if in sufficiently finely divided condition.

“Example 2: Mix 316 parts of Mosel - gnhr (either as it occurs in nature or after trituration) which may previously have been heated to a red heat, with an aqueous solution of 50 parts ammonium vanadate and 56 parts of potassium hydrate; thereupon evaporate off so much of the water that the remainder can be formed into granules; place this result in a furnace and heat at 480° C. with gas containing sulfur dioxid and oxygen (such as can be obtained from a pyrites burner) and then, if desired, continue the heating for some time in a current of air; the product of this operation is a catalytic agent whieh is ready for use in the same manner as the product in Example 1.”

“The catalyst produced by Examples 1 and 2 is employed for the manufacture of sulfuric anhydrid in the usual manner, namely by bringing into contact with it both sulfur dioxid and oxygen.”

(9) The elaims of the patent in suit, eight in number, are:

“1. As a new composition of matter, a catalytic agent containing vanadium in chemical combination distributed on a very finely divided carrier not exceeding sixty microns in diameter.

“2. As a new composition of matter, a shaped catalytic agent containing vanadium in chemical combination distributed on a very finely divided carrier not exceeding sixty microns in diameter.

“3. As a new composition of matter, a catalytic agent containing vanadio oxid distributed on a very finely divided carrier not exceeding sixty microns in diameter.

[146]*146“4. As a new composition of matter, a catalytic agent containing vanadio oxid and potash distributed on a very finely divided carrier not exceeding sixty microns in diameter.

“5. The improvement in the art of making sulfuric anhydrid which consists in causing sulfur dioxid and oxygen to come into contact with a catalytic agent comprising vanadium in chemical combination distributed on a very finely divided carrier not exceeding sixty microns in diameter.

“6. The improvement in the art of making sulfuric anhydrid which consists in causing sulfur dioxid and oxygen to come into contact with a catalytic agent comprising vanadio oxid distributed on a very finely divided carrier not exceeding sixty microns in diameter.

“7. The improvement in the art of making sulfuric anhydrid which consists in causing sulfur dioxid and oxygen to come into contact with a catalytic agent containing vanadio oxid and potash, which agent has previously been heated in the presence of air and in the absence of sulfur dioxid.

“8.

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Bluebook (online)
60 F.2d 144, 14 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 47, 1932 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1313, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/general-chemical-co-v-selden-co-pawd-1932.