In re Ferris

142 F.2d 1020, 31 C.C.P.A. 1104, 61 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 490, 1944 CCPA LEXIS 65
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedApril 27, 1944
DocketNo. 4911
StatusPublished

This text of 142 F.2d 1020 (In re Ferris) 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 Ferris, 142 F.2d 1020, 31 C.C.P.A. 1104, 61 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 490, 1944 CCPA LEXIS 65 (ccpa 1944).

Opinion

Garrett, Presiding Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an appeal from the decision of the Board of Appeals.of the United States Patent Office affirming the decision of the examiner [1105]*1105rejecting as unpatentable over prior art cited, all the claims, numbered 1 to 8, inclusive, of appellant’s application for patent relating to a method for “Separation of Potassium and Sodium Chlorides.”

Claims 2, 3, and 4 are so drawn that they are dependent on claim 1, and claims 6, 7, and 8 are so drawn that they are dependent on claim 5 which differs in meaning from claim 1 only in that it contains a limitation relative to a reagent which appellant’s brief concedes does' not constitute a new concept.

In the oral argument before us counsel for appellant conceded that claim 1 is the test claim — that is, that unless claim 1 be allowable none of the others are. On the other hand, if it be allowable all the others are.

It is sufficient, therefore, to quote claim 1. It reads:

1. The method of separating potassium chloride and sodium chloride from crude salt mixtures which comprises grinding the crude mixture to an extent sufficient to effect physical separation of part of the chlorides while leaving a large part of the salt mixture insufficiently ground while avoiding crushing of the chlorides to a pulverized condition and leaving a large proportion of particles of the salt mixture, subjecting the ground salt mixture to a relatively coarse screening operation and returning the oversize particles for regrinding, subjecting a pulp of the undersize screened particles in a saturated salt solution to flotation separation with a flotation agent to give a froth concentrate of one of the chlorides, subjecting the tails from the flotation operation to a screening treatment using a screen in the range of 30 to 60 mesh to separate particles of the other chloride from the insufficiently ground oversize material and returning the oversize material for further grinding, thus maintaining a circulating load of insufficiently ground material through the flotation operation and back to the grinding operation.

In bis application appellant included a drawing which diagrammatically shows his process. The crude material is passed by a conveyor from a storage bin to a ball mill where it is first ground as described in claim 1. The grinding results in different sized particles which pass to a coarse mesh screen (the drawing describes it as an 8-mesh screen, but the claims do not mention any specific dimension of that particular screen). The smaller particles fall through the meshes and, after the introduction of the reagent mentioned in claim 5 (but not involved here), pass to and through a series of four flotation cells. The particles which are too large to pass through the screen are returned to the ball mill, reground, and passed again to the screen and such as are small enough are carried to and through the flotation cells referred to. A salt solution is apparently introduced from a brine storage receptacle while the particles are on the screen and the finer particles become saturated with it. In the process of separation by flotation in the cells a flotation agent is used which gives a froth concentrate of “one of the chlorides.” Parts of this concentrate seemingly may be drawn from the successive cells or passed back to the [1106]*1106first cell for any refutation desired, but after passing through the fourth cell there remain particles referred to as “tails,” which are passed through two other flotation cells in which a froth concentrate of “the other chloride” is developed. The trails remaining are carried to a second screen, described in claims 1 and 5 as “in the range of 30- to 60-mesh,” where further separation takes place by screening, and the oversized particles of the tails are then returned to the ball mill for further grinding. Other features are shown as in the drawing whereby steps of the process, such as agitating, filtering, washing, etc., are carried out, but since those .steps are not involved in the claims they need not be described.

The examiner rejected the claims on references consisting of excerpts from a publication entitled “Denver Equipment Index,” and two patents, viz:

Kirby, 2,088,325, July 27, 1937.
Dehn (Br.), 481,100, February 28, 1938.

As indicated, the latter is a British patent which seemingly was procured by Dehn for the American Botash Co. which uses the process at a plant in New Mexico. The Kirby reference was cited only in connection with the reagent limitation in claim 5 above alluded to, and in view of. the concession of appellant it requires no consideration by us.

In his statement following the appeal to the board the examiner described the disclosure of the two references requiring our consideration as follows :

The Denver Equipment Index shows a system o£ flotation on pages 104 and 105 and outlines the advantages thereof which involves the flotation of the mineral as soon as it is freed and before it has been ground finer. This process involves the use of flotation between the mill and the classifier to remove the separated material before being classified as to size. The book shows on the other pages cited the use of a screen on the end of the ball mill for removing material coarser than about 10 mesh from the feed to the flotation cell.
The Dehn patent illustrates the flotation process used by the Potash Company of America in its. plant at Carlsbad, New Mexico, for separating potassium and sodium chloride [present in sylvanite ores]. In this process the salts are ground in a ball mill classified and the classified material separated by froth flotation and the tailings retreated in the circuit.

We think it proper to add to the above that the publication relates particularly to the treatment of gold bearing ores by a flotation process after grinding them, but references are also made to the treatment of a number of base metal sulphite ores.

We have obtained the impression from the respective decisions below that appellant there emphasized certain features which are not emphasized before us, and that certain matters emphasized before us were not emphasized there — at least, not until appellant filed with the board a petition for reconsideration of its original decision. Among the features originally emphasized below was tliat of recover[1107]*1107ing tlie potassium chloride element in the coarsest form in which it can be recovered by flotation and this is mentioned at different points in appellant’s brief before us, but as we understand his position, this feature is not relied upon other than in connection with the maintenance of a circulating load of insufficiently ground material.

It will be observed that the concluding clause of claim 1 states as a, part of appellant’s process “maintaining a circulating load of insufficiently ground material through thé flotation operation and back to the grinding operation.” This evidently refers to such of the particles described as tails as are too large to pass through the 30- to 60-mesh screen and are returned to the ball mill for further grinding.

In appellant’s brief before us it is said:

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142 F.2d 1020, 31 C.C.P.A. 1104, 61 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 490, 1944 CCPA LEXIS 65, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-ferris-ccpa-1944.