In re Udy

173 F.2d 230, 36 C.C.P.A. 911
CourtCourt of Customs and Patent Appeals
DecidedMarch 1, 1949
DocketNo. 5515
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 173 F.2d 230 (In re Udy) 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 Udy, 173 F.2d 230, 36 C.C.P.A. 911 (ccpa 1949).

Opinion

O’Connell, 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 action of the Primary Examiner in rejecting all the claims in appellant’s application for a patent for alleged “improvements in ■ Metallurgy.” Of such claims, 5 to 8, inclusive, ai’e directed to an exothermic reaction mixture, and the remainder of the claims, 13 to 16, inclusive, are directed to a “method of producing sound metal castings.”

[912]*912The claims were rejected as unpatentable over the following cited prior art:

Udy, 2,243,784, May 27,1941.
Francis et al., 2,294,169, Aug. 25, 1942.

Claims 5 and 13 are considered sufficiently illustrative. They read:

. 5. An exothermic, reaction mixture for use in providing slag layers on the surfaces of molten metals in casting molds and ingot molds to inhibit or reduce piping, consisting essentially of iron' oxide, sodium nitrate and non-carbonaceous reducing material, the reducing material being present in the reaction mixture in amount sufficient to react with all of the sodium nitrate and to reduce a portion only of the iron of the iron oxide and the components of the reaction mixtures being present in such quantities and being so proportioned as to be capable upon ignition of the reaction-mixture of reacting exothermically to produce molten iron oxide-bearing slag.
13. The method of producing sound metal castings which comprises pouring molten metal into a suitable mold, contacting with an upper surface of molten metal within the mold an exothermic reaction mixture consisting essentially of iron oxide, sodium nitrate and non-carbonaceous reducing material, and thereby forming molten slag in contact with the molten metal, and maintaining the metal and slag in contact until the metal has solidified, the reducing material being present in the reaction mixture in amount sufficient to react with all of the sodium nitrate and to reduce a portion only of the iron of the iron oxide and the components of the reaction mixture being present in such quantities and being so proportioned as to be capable upon ignition of the reaction mixture of reacting exothermically to produce molten iron oxide-bearing slag.

Claims 6, 7, and 8 contain tbe same limitations as claim 5, with the respective exceptions that claim 6 defines the non-carbonaceous reducing material as comprising silicon; claim 7, as comprising aluminum; and claim 8, as ferrosilicon. Claims 14,15, and 16, as correctly pointed out in appellant’s brief, differ from claim 13 in the same manner, respectively, that claims 6,7, and 8 differ from claim 5.

The subject matter of the claims relates to a composition and to a method for reducing piping during solidification of metal in a mold, such as iron and steel. A “pipe” is described in appellant’s specification as a cavity formed in the interior of the metal during the process of casting which makes the portion of the casting containing the pipe defective and requiring that it be discarded at some time subsequent to casting. To inhibit or reduce piping, an exothermic reaction mixture is used .by appellant in' providing a slag which forms an insulating layer on the surface of the molten metal in the mold to prevent a too-rapid cooling of the metal as it solidifies.

. The patent to Udy, which is appellant’s own prior patent, relates to metallurgy and provides for metallurgical methods and materials. The patent discloses that an important object of the.invention is to provide a method of altering the compositions of metal products containing iron; to provide exothermic mixtures suitable for use in the produc[913]*913tion of metallic iron; and to provide a method of producing metallic iron products suitable for use in the production of high-strength, castings from metal.

In the production of the castings, the patentee Udy employs the principle of dilution of relatively impure metallic iron products with relatively pure metallic iron. The disclosure further contemplates the provision of methods and materials for increasing the temperatures of molten metal baths and for melting metals. In that connection, the following pertinent statements relative to the use of exothermic mixtures are set forth in the specification of the patent:

Reaction mixtures for incorporating iron or iron and silicon in molten metal baths may comprise silicon-containing material such as ferrosilicon, oxidising material such as sodium nitrate or sodium chlorate, particles of metallic iron and lime, or iron oxide, or lime and iron oxide or calcium ferrite (calcium oxide chemically combined with ferric oxide). * * *

Where molten iron only is incorporated into the reaction mixture, the specification of the patent provides:

the silicon may be employed in a more limited amount such that only a portion of any iron oxide present will be reduced and the unreduced iron oxide will function to increase the fluidity of any slag produced.
In producing an exothermic mixture in accordance with the invention, I may employ one part by weight of silicon for oxidation to not less than about twenty (20) parts by weight of metal to be melted. * * *

The patent to Francis et al. relates to the manufacture of iron and steel castings, and accomplishes the same object which appellant in the present case had in view. The method of manufacture disclosed in the patent, however, shows the use of an exothermic mixture in forming the slag for the surface of the metal which differs from the exothermic mixture defined in the appealed claims. According to the disclosure of the patent, as soon as the metal has been east in the usual manner to fill the hot sinkhead on the mold, the surface of the metal is covered immediately with a layer of thermite mixture containing aluminum powder, iron oxide and fluorspar.

■ The examiner rejected claims 5 to 8, inclusive, on the ground that the precise composition defined in such claims is disclosed in the patent to Udy. They were further rejected by the examiner, together with claims 13 to 16, inclusive, as being unpatentable over the disclosure of Francis et al. in view of Udy. Claims 13 to 16, inclusive, were further rejected by the examiner as being unpatentable over Francis et al. in view of Udy. The examiner summarized his grounds of rejection as follows:

1. Udy discloses the composition claimed by applicant and recites that a portion only of the iron oxide may be reduced to increase the fluidity of the slag.
[914]*9142. Francis discloses an anti-piping process using an exothermic reaction slag producing mix and no invention would be involved in substituting the mix of Udy for the mix of Francis et al.
3. No invention is seen to reside in decreasing the reducing agent of Francis et al. so that a portion only of the iron oxide is reduced, especially since Udy teaches that this is a common expedient if a more fluid slag is desired.

The Board of Appeals agreed with the grounds of rejection stated by the examiner and explained its reason for so doing. A petition for reconsideration was considered by the board, and denied by it with respect to making any change in its original decision.

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Bluebook (online)
173 F.2d 230, 36 C.C.P.A. 911, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-udy-ccpa-1949.