PGS GEOPHYSICAL AS v. IANCU

891 F.3d 1354
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
DecidedJune 7, 2018
Docket2016-2470, 2016-2472, 2016-2474
StatusPublished
Cited by52 cases

This text of 891 F.3d 1354 (PGS GEOPHYSICAL AS v. IANCU) 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
PGS GEOPHYSICAL AS v. IANCU, 891 F.3d 1354 (Fed. Cir. 2018).

Opinion

Taranto, Circuit Judge.

*1357 PGS Geophysical AS owns U.S. Patent No. 6,906,981, which describes and claims methods and systems for performing "marine seismic surveying" to determine the structure of earth formations below the seabed. WesternGeco, L.L.C., a competitor of PGS's, filed three petitions requesting inter partes reviews (IPRs) of claims 1-38 of the '981 patent. The Patent Trial and Appeal Board of the Patent and Trademark Office (PTO), acting as the PTO Director's delegate, instituted three IPRs, but it specified for review only some of the claims WesternGeco challenged and only some of the grounds for WesternGeco's challenges, not all claims or all grounds. In its final written decisions in the IPRs, the Board ruled partly for PGS and partly for WesternGeco on the reviewed claims and grounds. Both PGS and WesternGeco appealed, but WesternGeco then settled with PGS and withdrew, leaving only PGS's appeals as to certain claims of the '981 patent that the Board ruled unpatentable for obviousness. The Director intervened to defend the Board's decisions. 35 U.S.C. § 143 .

We affirm. We first conclude that, although SAS Institute, Inc. v. Iancu , --- U.S. ----, 138 S.Ct. 1348 , 200 L.Ed.2d 695 (2018), now makes clear that the Board erred in limiting the scope of the IPRs it instituted and hence the scope of its final written decisions, we have jurisdiction to address the merits of the Board's final written decisions and that we need not, and will not, sua sponte revive the "non-instituted" claims and grounds. We then conclude that the Board committed no error justifying disturbance of its obviousness decisions on their merits.

I

A

In the invention of the '981 patent, both seismic energy sources and seismic energy sensors are towed behind moving boats, the seismic sources are fired in a specific manner, and the sensors receive energy reflecting off earth formations below the seabed-the results being informative about the structure of those formations. '981 patent, Abstract; id. , col. 1, lines 50-52. More particularly, the invention uses multiple seismic sources that are spaced apart "at a selected distance." Id. , col. 2, lines 42-47. The "seismic energy sources such as air guns and water guns ... are fired substantially simultaneously," id. , col. 4, lines 4-6, but with a short, predetermined time delay that is typically "less than one second," id. , col. 6, lines 18-20. "Firing the first source, waiting the predetermined delay and firing the second source thereafter is referred to ... as a 'firing sequence.' " Id. , col. 5, line 67 through col. 6, line 2. The claimed methods use multiple firing sequences, and the time delay "is different for each successive firing sequence." Id. , col. 6, lines 4-9. "The delay times may be random, quasi-random or systematically determined ... and only *1358 need to be known." Id. , col. 10, lines 39-41. "[S]eismic sensors (typically hydrophones)" capture the acoustic response from underground rock formations. Id. , col. 4, lines 21-23,

Because the sources are fired (shot) in close temporal proximity, the responses from multiple shots will overlap. The use of known time delays between shots allows the "signals from each of the plurality of sources [to] be uniquely identified in a shot sequence" when post-processing the data. Id. , col. 10, lines 56-62. Time delays are one form of "encoding" the data to allow such identification, which is then "decoded" in post-processing. PGS Br. 8-9, 13.

It is desirable to record the response of multiple shots "to reduce the effects of noise and acquire a higher quality seismic representation of a particular subsurface structure." '981 patent, col. 2, lines 7-15. By isolating the seismic sources and "summing or 'stacking' " the recorded responses, the signal-to-noise ratio is increased for the response from each seismic source, which results in better imaging of the sub-surface structures. Id. ; PGS Br. 14-15. The use of multiple shots fired in close temporal proximity makes the surveying process more efficient. PGS Br. 7-8; see also '981 patent, col. 10, lines 52-64.

Use of time-delay encoding in marine seismic surveying, where the seismic sources are moving (as they are towed behind a boat), can result in reduced spatial resolution of the data. Because the sources are towed behind moving vessels, each shot in a firing sequence is taken from a slightly different location. This can result in "spatial-reflection point smearing" (smearing) when the individual shot records are later summed together. PGS Br. 5, 12-13.

Several of the '981 patent's claims are at issue here. Claim 31 is illustrative for present purposes:

31. A method for determining signal components attributable to a first seismic energy source and to a second seismic energy source in signals recorded from seismic sensors, the first and second sources and the sensors towed along a survey line, the first source and the second source fired in a plurality of sequences, a time delay between firing the first source and the second source in each firing sequence being different than the time delay in other ones of the firing sequences, the method comprising:
determining a first component of the recorded signals that is coherent from shot to shot and from trace to trace;

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891 F.3d 1354, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pgs-geophysical-as-v-iancu-cafc-2018.