Gould v. Hellwarth

472 F.2d 1383, 176 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 515, 1973 CCPA LEXIS 426
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedFebruary 15, 1973
DocketPatent Appeal No. 8791
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 472 F.2d 1383 (Gould v. Hellwarth) 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
Gould v. Hellwarth, 472 F.2d 1383, 176 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 515, 1973 CCPA LEXIS 426 (ccpa 1973).

Opinion

LANE, Judge.

This appeal is from the decision of the Board of Patent Interferences awarding Hellwarth, the junior party, priority of invention as to two counts to a so-called “Q-switched” or “Giant Pulse” laser. Hellwarth is involved on his application serial No. 128,458 filed August 1, 1961.1 The appellant, Gould, is involved on his application serial No. 804,540 filed April 6, 1959.2 The determinative issue is whether the disclosure of the Gould application was adequate to enable a person skilled in the art to make an operable device (35 U.S.C. § 112). We agree with the board that it was not and affirm its decision.

[1384]*1384 The Subject Matter

The laser is a device which provides light amplification by stimulated emission of radiation. Amplification of electronic radiation by stimulated emission of radiation was first attained by devices operating in the microwave frequency range and known by the acronym “maser.” 3 The laser, also known as an “optical maser,” resulted subsequently when such amplification was achieved at light or optical frequencies. The basic requirement of a maser or laser is a working medium, usually a gas or a solid, containing atoms or molecules having one or more sets of energy levels. Unlike the condition at equilibrium, where lower energy states of a material are more heavily populated than the higher energy states, material constituting a laser working medium must have a higher energy level populated by a significantly greater number of atoms or molecules than a lower level. A medium in such non-equilibrium condition is said to have an “inverted population” or “negative temperature.” The medium may be excited or “pumped” to provide the inverted population by means of a source of electromagnetic energy, such as a strong light of suitable wavelength. Laser activity results from the medium in a state of population inversion emitting wave energy of a frequency corresponding to the separation of the inverted pair of energy levels.

The two counts define an “optical maser” comprising basic laser elements —a laser material, means for pumping the material to a condition of stimulated emission, and reflecting means defining a radiation path in the material for repeatedly reflecting the stimulated emission energy radiated by the material between the reflecting means. Additionally, they call for the combination with those elements of means intermediate the reflecting means in the path of the radiated energy for altering the amount of stimulated energy reflected by the reflecting means. The altering means permits impeding the reflections to prevent emissions from the laser for certain periods to allow build-up of the amount of population inversion so that “giant pulses” of greatly enhanced energy concentration are emitted when the impediment is removed. The name “Q-switehed” is applied to the modified laser because the altering means controls or varies the electrical quality or “Q” of the “cavity” in which the working material is confined.

Count 3 is representative of the involved counts and reads as follows:

3. Apparatus for controlling the stimulated emission energy output of an optical maser comprising an optical maser material, means for pumping said material to a condition of stimulated emission, means for abstracting energy from said maser, reflecting means defining a radiation path including said maser material for repeatedly reflecting the stimulated emission energy radiated by said material between said reflecting means, [and] means in the path of said radiated energy for altering the amount of stimulated energy reflected between said reflecting means.

The Proceedings Below

Hellwarth asserted no date of invention prior to Gould’s filing date. No priority evidence was submitted by either party and both parties rely on their filing dates. On motion by Hellwarth, final hearing was set to consider the sufficiency of the Gould application, and Hellwarth was granted permission to take testimony of Dr. Bela Lengyel on that question. Appellant took testimony of Dr. Arnold Bloom, Dr. Grant Fowles and Paul Rabinowitz in rebuttal. Len-gyel had worked at Hughes Aircraft when the first operable laser was built there by Dr. Theodore H. Maiman in [1385]*1385I960.4 Lengyel was chairman of a college physics department at the time of testifying and had done extensive writing in the laser field. Bloom and Grant did extensive work in the laser field beginning in 1961 and 1962, respectively. Rabinowitz was employed by TRG, Inc.5 on laser projects which began in 1959. As the board recognized, all four witnesses were highly qualified in the laser field at the time they testified.

Under Rule 282 of the Patent Office, providing for introduction of printed publications, Hellwarth placed in evidence a number of papers which scientists working in the laser field published beginning in about 1958 6 and work reports on the aforesaid TRG projects.

The Gould application includes a lengthy disclosure directed to obtaining laser action. It also suggests certain uses and refinements for an operable laser, including means for Q-switching such a laser. It is not questioned that the disclosure of the Q-switching feature would be adequate if the application adequately disclosed an operable laser in which the feature could be incorporated. Rather, appellee charged, and the board agreed, that the disclosure was insufficient as of its filing date to enable a person skilled in the art to make an operable laser.

Lengyel’s testimony was summarized by the board as follows (with reference to the record omitted):

The testimony of Lengyel is to the effect that as of 1959 the Gould disclosure did not have sufficient information for one skilled in the art to construct an operative laser of any kind and noted that the Schawlow-Townes paper7 included most of the information that was available but an operable laser was not made until 1960 by Maiman. According to Len-gyel, in order to construct an operable laser one skilled in quantum electronics would have to know the physical parameters of the material, e. g., its temperature or temperature range; if gas filled, the pressure and approximate size or some relationship between the possible dimensions of the device. The minimum radiation necessary for its excitation if optically excited should be known. If excited by discharge, then the condition of operation of that discharge should be known. The basic properties of the cavity such as reflectivity and curvature of the mirrors should be known. The relation between the various parameters would have to be known quite precisely in order to obtain an operable laser.
Lengyel in his testimony reviewed the Gould disclosure and pointed out that although details are disclosed with respect to various lasers, the application does not disclose a complete set of operating parameters for any laser.

The board reviewed the testimony of appellant’s witnesses at length, noting particularly that Bloom and Fowles expressed the opinion that the Gould application gave sufficient information as of 1959 to build a laser. However, it stated:

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472 F.2d 1383, 176 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 515, 1973 CCPA LEXIS 426, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gould-v-hellwarth-ccpa-1973.