In Re Arnold

185 F.2d 686, 38 C.C.P.A. 768, 88 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 93, 1950 CCPA LEXIS 294
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedDecember 5, 1950
DocketPatent Appeals 5721
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 185 F.2d 686 (In Re Arnold) 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
In Re Arnold, 185 F.2d 686, 38 C.C.P.A. 768, 88 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 93, 1950 CCPA LEXIS 294 (ccpa 1950).

Opinion

JOHNSON, Judge.

The appellant filed an application in the United States Patent Office for letters patent covering a method of treating certain *687 materials by means of an alternating electrostatic field so as to fuse and bond the surface of the materials through the selective agitation of molecules at the surface, ns distinguished from previously known methods of accomplishing by induction or dielectric heating similar results. The application was examined in the Patent Office as required by law, and the claims presented in the application were rejected as being unpatentable over certain patents cited as references. Preliminary to taking an appeal from the examiner’s rejection to the Board of Appeals of the Patent Office, the applicant presented several amendments for dle purpose of placing his claims in better form for appeal. Newly presented claims 39, 40, 44, and 45 were held to be allowable, and the appeal to the Board of Appeals was from the final rejection of claims 34 to 38, 41, 42, 43, 46, and 47. The Board of Appeals affirmed the rejection of the claims on the ground that they are unpatentable over the following United States patents: Pitman, 2,087,480, July 20, 1937; Kassner, 2,089,966, Aug. 17, 1937; Keller, 2,179,261, Nov. 7, 1939. The patent applicant twice petitioned for reconsideration by the board of its decision. Unavailing, he brings the case before us on appeal. R.S. 4911, 35 U.S.C.A. § 59a; 28 U.S.C.A. § 1542.

Appellant has consistently contended both within the Patent Office and here that the examiner and later the Board of Appeals failed to understand his invention and consequently misapplied the disclosures of the reference patents to his claims. The applicant appeared pro se at the oral argument here to explain the technical substance of his method, as he stated, because of the misunderstanding which he believes has occasioned the rejection in the Patent Office of the claims at bar.

Appellant’s method relates to subjecting material to a high frequency alternating electrostatic field, and particularly to .applying the energy of the field to selective portions or locations in the material to accomplish a variety of useful results, in-eluding welding or bonding and fusion, The use of high frequency alternating electrostatic fields to heat bodies as in welding or bonding operations is not new with appellant, but by his method of selective application of the energy of the field, he contends that he can induce in the material being treated “phenomena similar to those which occur at higher tempera-tures while the actual temperature of the material remains below that at which they ordinarily occur.” It appears that when a polar substance is subjected to an alternating field, the field exerts a moment of force upon individual molecules corn-prising the body. If the molecules are thought of as having positive and negative charges separated in space along the molecule, it will be seen that the electrostatic field will tend to attract the positive charge toward one electrode and the negative charge toward the other electrode. As the polarity of the alternating field is reversed, the pull on the molecules is also reversed, As the frequency of the alternating field is increased, the molecules have less time after each reversal of polarity to align themselves to the reversed polarity of the field, with the result that the motion of the molecules will begin to decrease as the frequency is further increased. As that phenomenon occurs, an accelerating change in the dielectric constant of the material takes place. The range within the frequency of the alternating electrostatic field at those phenomena occur is the an°malous dispersion range of the ma-tcrial- At the center frequency of that range, the average of the motions of the molecules induced by the alternating field is at a maximum. In this range maximum energy absorption is said to occur,

Appellant’s discovery is not the principie of the anomalous dispersion range. Pie determines by known methods the anomalous dispersion range “for the particular material and for the particular conditions of treatment.” As the field corresponding to the center of that range is first applied, appellant states, “the temperature of the substance is not abruptly increased as might be expected,” and “since the relaxation time may be different for each molecule and for given molecules in each environment,” he has 'found “that by the use of this mechanism” he can “selectively induce one sub *688 stance within a body or material to behave as though it were at a higher temperature than the rest of the body. Thus, appel-i lant states, he “may cause the surface of a body to fuse without fusing the interior.”

The drawings of the application illustrate an apparatus for practicing appellant’s method as it relates to bonding or welding together two sheets of thermoplastic material. “When a homogeneous material is used in this way,” the specification states, “it is found that the molecules at the surface respond more readily to the alternating field, and therefore will have their range of anomalous dispersion at a somewhat higher frequency than the molecules in the interior of the body. Advantageously, therefore, the higher frequency is selected to give a maximum effect at the surface.” The specification then states that “This effect may be further increased by the use of a surface coating to which the frequency is attuned.” That coating may be a plasticizer with an anomalous dispersion range different from that of the bodies being bonded. There the frequency is one in the anomalous dispersion range of the plasticizer or it may be a complex frequency including one in the anomalous dispersion range of the plastic material as well as one in the range of the plasticizer.

Where a plasticizer is used, the-rmoplastic sheets are overlapped and passed between the pressure roller electrodes of an apparatus described in the application, The material is exposed to the selected high frequency field, and as the material passes between the rollers, “there is an instantaneous fusing of the surface” which under the pressure of the rollers produces a bond, the material coming out from between the electrode rollers “without overheating and apparently at a temperature below the normal softening point of the thermoplastic.”

The specification states that the same procedure may be followed without the use of the plasticizer coating, but that “the process is more sensitive to exact frequency control since the frequency to which the surface molecules 'respond is closer to that at which the interior molecules respond so that" uncontrolled variations in the circuit may result in' a softening of' the entire sheet with a consequent squeezing out of material from between the rolls.”

Claim 34 is illustrative of the subject matter on appeal, and reads as follows: «34.

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185 F.2d 686, 38 C.C.P.A. 768, 88 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 93, 1950 CCPA LEXIS 294, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-arnold-ccpa-1950.