In Re Josephus J.M. Braat

937 F.2d 589, 19 U.S.P.Q. 2d (BNA) 1289, 1991 U.S. App. LEXIS 13306, 1991 WL 113210
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
DecidedJune 28, 1991
Docket90-1470
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 937 F.2d 589 (In Re Josephus J.M. Braat) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Josephus J.M. Braat, 937 F.2d 589, 19 U.S.P.Q. 2d (BNA) 1289, 1991 U.S. App. LEXIS 13306, 1991 WL 113210 (Fed. Cir. 1991).

Opinion

*590 RICH, Circuit Judge.

Braat appeals from the May 30, 1990 decision of the United States Patent and Trademark Office (PTO) Board of Patent Appeals and Interferences (Board), Appeal No. 90-0971, affirming the rejection of claims 8-10, 13, and 15-17 of application Serial No. 569,546 (Braat), filed January 10, 1984, entitled “Record Carrier with Optically Readable Phase Structure and Apparatus for Reading,” on the grounds of obviousness-type double patenting in view of commonly-assigned U.S. Patent No. 4,209,-804 (Dil). We reverse.

BACKGROUND

Nature of Braat’s Invention

The real party in interest in this case is U.S. Philips Corporation (Philips), the as-signee of both the Braat application and the Dil patent. The Braat application is based, through two intervening continuing applications, on application Serial No. 925,-433 filed July 17, 1978, which in turn claims priority from a Netherlands patent application filed April 3, 1978. The Dil patent issued June 24, 1980, on an application filed January 31, 1979.

Both the Braat application and the Dil patent are concerned with optical record carriers of the type that store information which can be retrieved by scanning the record carrier with a beam of radiation such as a laser beam. One commonly-known example of such a record carrier is the compact disc, or CD.

Record carriers are generally circular, and store the information in tracks extending around the surface of the carrier. The tracks are made up of “information areas” separated by “intermediate regions.” For example, the information areas can be pits formed in the track, and the intermediate regions can be lands formed between the pits. Information can be encoded by varying the length or spacing between the pits. A read apparatus is used to retrieve the information by projecting a read beam onto the information tracks and detecting variations in the light transmitted through or reflected from the tracks as the beam passes over the information areas.

The Braat application is concerned with the ability to increase the amount of information which can be stored on a record carrier. One way to do so, of course, is to place the tracks closer together. However, the minimum spacing between the tracks is limited by the ability of the read apparatus to focus the read beam on a single track. If the tracks are placed too close together, then a read beam which is intended to illuminate a certain track may inadvertently illuminate an adjacent track as well, resulting in interference or “cross-talk.”

The Braat application discloses a way to reduce the effect of “cross-talk,” so that even if more than one track is inadvertently illuminated, the apparatus can still accurately read the stored information. This is done by alternating the “phase depth” 1 of adjacent tracks (or, more generically, of adjacent track portions) and then using two different detection systems, one of which is particularly sensitive to the signal from track portions of one phase depth and the other of which is sensitive to the signal from track portions of the other phase depth. As a result, the tracks can be placed closer together.

In the preferred embodiment described in the Braat application, the phase depth is altered by varying the physical depth of the pits in adjacent tracks. Figure 3 of the Braat application (shown below) is a radial cross-section of the preferred embodiment, and illustrates this concept.

*591 [[Image here]]

As seen above, the tracks alternate between ones which have information areas (pits) 4 which are of a depth dj, and ones which have information areas 4' of depth d2- 2

Claim 8 is illustrative of the claims on appeal. It reads as follows:

8. A record carrier comprising an information structure containing information adapted to be read with a beam of radiation of a single wavelength, said information structure having a plurality of adjacent information track portions each comprising a plurality of areas separated from each other along said track portion by intermediate regions having a different influence on the read beam than said areas, one track portion of a pair of said adjacent track portions containing areas of a first configuration which diffract the read beam of said single wavelength incident thereon into a zero order subbeam and a first order subbeam with a first phase difference therebetween and the other track portion of said pair containing areas of a second configuration which diffract the read beam of said single wavelength incident thereon into said zero and first order subbeams with a second phase difference therebetween which is different from said first phase difference.

The Dil Patent

The Dil patent is also concerned with controlling the phase depth of information areas on record carriers, but is primarily concerned with the effect that the angle of the side walls of the information areas has on the phase depth. Dil teaches that a particularly useful record carrier is one which has V-shaped information areas with (1) a phase depth in the range between 100° and 125°, and (2) side walls whose angle of inclination is in the range between 65° and 85° (relative to the normal to the carrier surface).

Dil recognizes that this improvement is particularly useful when combined with the invention of the Braat application, which is specifically referred to, and so discloses an embodiment wherein alternating track portions have different phase depths, and the information areas have angled side walls. For example, the Dil patent specification includes the following:

Two types of information areas in one record carrier may for example be used in order to obtain a high information density, as is described in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 925,433, filed July 18, 1978 [Braat]. If in such a record carrier use is made of the concept underlying the invention, said record carrier is characterized in that between first information tracks containing information areas with a phase depth between 100° and 110° second information tracks are formed which contain information areas whose phase depth is approximately 180°.

Claim 1 of Dil is directed to the improvement disclosed in that patent, i.e., a record *592 carrier having angled side walls. Specifically, it states in relevant part:

1. A record carrier ... characterized in that the cross-section, transverse to the track direction, of the information areas is substantially V-shaped, that the phase depth of the information areas has one value between 100° and 125°, and that the angle of inclination between the walls of the information areas and the normal to the record carrier is substantially constant and has a value between 65° and 85°.

However, dependent claims 5 and 6 of Dil recite as an additional feature the alternating phase depth structure of the Braat application. For example, claim 5 reads as follows:

5.

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Bluebook (online)
937 F.2d 589, 19 U.S.P.Q. 2d (BNA) 1289, 1991 U.S. App. LEXIS 13306, 1991 WL 113210, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-josephus-jm-braat-cafc-1991.