Imperial Chemical Industries, PLC v. Henkel Corp.

545 F. Supp. 635
CourtDistrict Court, D. Delaware
DecidedJuly 23, 1982
DocketCiv. A. 78-301
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 545 F. Supp. 635 (Imperial Chemical Industries, PLC v. Henkel Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Imperial Chemical Industries, PLC v. Henkel Corp., 545 F. Supp. 635 (D. Del. 1982).

Opinion

OPINION

STAPLETON, District Judge:

The recovery of copper from ore through solvent extraction has gained widespread commercial acceptance over the last decade. The reagents that effect this extraction are the subject matter of this patent case. Plaintiff Imperial Chemical Industries, PLC (“ICI”), a giant of the chemical world and a relatively recent entrant into the copper extraction reagent field here, alleges patent infringement against defendant Henkel Corporation (“Henkel”), 1 the pioneering firm in this area. Two ICI patents are in issue: the Ackerley and Mack patent 2 which claims a particular reagent, 5-nonyl-2-hydroxy benzaldoxime, and the Dalton patent 3 which claims a solvent extraction process utilizing the Ackerley and Mack compound plus an additive, nonyl phenol. Henkel claims that both ICI patents are invalid because anticipated, obvious, and non-useful; that both are unenforceable because of ICI’s conduct in prosecuting the patents; and that there has been no infringement. This Opinion constitutes the Court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law after trial on the merits.

I. BACKGROUND FACTS.

A. The Solvent Extraction Process.

Solvent extraction is part of a three step process for recovering purified copper metal from ores containing small percentages of copper. The three steps in this process are (1) “leaching”, the use of sulfuric acid or ammonia to dissolve copper from ores also containing other metals to form an aqueous solution; (2) “solvent extraction”, the concentration and purification of the copper metal; and (3) “electrowinning”, the recovery of the purified copper by electrolysis. The solvent extraction step has two stages —“extraction” and “stripping”.

The starting material for the solvent extraction of copper is the aqueous leach solution. The leaching medium contains salts of coppers and other metals that it dissolved as it was trickled through the ores. 4 In order to separate the copper from the other materials contained in the solution, *638 this aqueous solution is then mixed with another solution containing a copper extracting reagent. This is the “extraction” stage of the solvent extraction process.

The copper extracting reagent is dissolved in an organic solvent, normally kerosene. The kerosene solution will not dissolve in the aqueous solution; rather the two liquids are agitated together in large tanks, called mixers, to form small droplets so that the copper can transfer from the aqueous solution to the kerosene. The copper extracting reagent dissolved in the kerosene then “grabs hold” of the copper dissolved in the aqueous solution by forming a reagent-copper complex.

The kerosene, now containing the reagent-copper complex in solution, is then allowed to separate from the depleted aqueous solution. The mixing tank has an outlet which feeds into a large settling tank where this “phase separation” (i.e. the organic phase from the aqueous phase) takes place. Usually, this process of extraction and phase separation is repeated through two or more mixer-settler stages.

In the next step, the “loaded” organic solvent containing the reagent-copper complex is transferred to a different set of mixer tanks where the copper is “stripped” from the kerosene. 5 This stripping is accomplished by mixing with another aqueous solution containing concentrated sulfuric acid and water. The highly acid strip solution breaks apart the reagent-copper complex and thus transfers the now purified and concentrated copper to the aqueous strip solution. As in the extraction process, the mixture is fed through two or more mixer-settler stages to facilitate the stripping of the copper from the organic phase.

The solvent extraction process is completed because this aqueous strip solution now contains only copper ions. The solution is then fed to another part of the plant, 6 where the copper is collected on metal plates in a process called electrowinning. 7

B. Copper Extraction Reagents — The Chemistry.

With one exception, 8 * all of the copper extracting reagents that have been developed for use in the solvent extraction process fall within a general category of chemical compositions called hydroxy aryl oximes. As the name suggests, these compounds have three essential components:

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545 F. Supp. 635, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/imperial-chemical-industries-plc-v-henkel-corp-ded-1982.