Ruben v. Ariston Laboratories, Inc.

40 F. Supp. 551, 50 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 279, 1941 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2992
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedJune 19, 1941
DocketNo. 13822
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 40 F. Supp. 551 (Ruben v. Ariston Laboratories, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ruben v. Ariston Laboratories, Inc., 40 F. Supp. 551, 50 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 279, 1941 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2992 (N.D. Ill. 1941).

Opinion

BARNES, District Judge.

The patents in suit are Ruben No. 1,714,-191, issued May 21, 1929, on an application filed December 22, 1926, and Ruben No. 1.710.073, issued April 23, 1929, on an application filed March 21, 1927, which was a continuation in part of the earlier application. Both patents relate to electric condensers. Of patent No. 1,714,191, claims 4, 5, 6 and 7 are in suit. Of patent No. 1.710.073, claims 2, 5, 6, 7 and 8 are in suit.

An electrical condenser takes advantage of the fact that when there exists between two conductors, insulated from one another, difference of potential or electric voltage, there is set up in the insulating medium between them a state of stress in which energy is resident. A condenser, therefore, consists of two conducting bodies separated by an insulating material. An electrolytic condenser is characterized by the fact that one of the conductors is a metal plate capable of having formed upon it a film of insulating material, while the other conductor is an electrolyte-containing material capable of forming the film on the plate. The word “electrolyte” means a chemical substance which, when dissolved in a liquid, will be dissociated and render the liquid conductive. The word is also used to mean the mixture of liquid and chemical substance. A wet electrolytic condenser is one in which aluminum electrodes are immersed in a mobile liquid aqueous electrolyte solution. The patents disclose dry electrolytic condensers of the aluminum film-forming type in which the aluminum electrodes separated by porous spacers of gauze or paper impregnated with a viscous pasty electrolyte composition are rolled up in spiral form.

In patent No. 1,714,191 Ruben says:

“For the electrode material I prefer thin aluminum sheets having an oxide film formed upon the surfaces before assembly, and as the electrolyte, glycerine having a relatively small amount of water and having mixed therewith suspended powdered sodium bicarbonate, a small percentage of boric acid being present to stabilize the paste which has a sodium borate content due to reaction of the boric acid with the sodium bicarbonate and to increase the conductivity of the mixture. In absorbing from the atmosphere sufficient moisture to maintain the desired conductivity, the ionic conductivity of the condensers is held constant. ., ,

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“The preferred method of assembling the element of this device is to apply the pastelike electrolyte mixture to a sheet of gauze spread over the oxide surface of the aluminum sheets, the electrolyte being then in the form of a layer about Jie inch in thickness. Over this should be placed the other electrode element, and the whole compressed for complete contact. If the elements are to be coiled another layer of the gauze and the paste electrolyte should be applied so as to keep the electrodes separated. The electrolyte permeates the gauze and fills the interstices establishing a layer over its entire area. ‘Forming’ the electrodes or coating the surfaces with aluminum oxide may be accomplished by connecting the sheets as the anodes in circuits in a bath of ammonium sulphate, the oxide serving to maintain the leakage at a low value.”

In patent No. 1,710,073 Ruben says:

“Glycerine has been found to be a particularly satisfactory material for use as a suspension medium for the film-forming electrolyte since it possesses in itself all the characteristics desired, being sufficiently viscous to form a suitable paste with a film-forming electrolyte, having a relatively high dielectric constant value to thereby increase the alternating current capacitance of the condenser, and being highly hygroscopic so that loss of life due to evaporation of electrolyte is effectively overcome.

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“The particular film forming electrolyte employed may be any one of a large number of well known -electrolytes, but I have found a mixture of boric acid and sodium borate to be especially satisfactory. As a general rule, it may be said that film-forming electrolytes should preferably be either neutral or slightly acid in character and for this reason it is customary to employ for this purpose water solutions of the salts of weak acids. Similarly mix[553]*553tures of weak acids with salts of the above mentioned character are used to replace the latter in order to reduce the alkalinity of the solution and thereby more nearly approach neutrality. I use a mixture of boric acid and sodium borate dissolved in water since such a mixture may be readily proportioned so as to be substantially stable chemically and possess the desired conductivity values. Also, a concentrated solution of these compounds with water mixes readily with glycerine to form a glacial like paste which is especially easy to spread. In forming the paste, the electrolyte is first prepared preferably by dissolving the film-forming electrolyte materials in hot water and this solution is then thoroughly intermixed with glycerine to form a product of uniform composition.

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"The preferred electrolyte composition is one in which the ratio of sodium borate to boric acid by weight is approximately 17 to 1 with the water content about 2 c.c. to each gram of boric acid. This solution is then added to and thoroughly mixed with glycerine whose content is preferably in the neighborhood of 2% times that of boric acid. These ratios and figures are of course only exemplary and the values used may depart materially from those given while remaining within the scope of the invention.”

Radio receiving sets began to be manufactured and sold in substantial quantities about 1920. The electrical current to supply such sets was provided by dry batteries for the high voltage B current, and a storage battery for the low voltage A current. The B batteries had to be replaced frequently. The A battery had to be recharged every week or two, and it contained sulphuric acid which was ruinous to rugs and furniture if it spattered. The house lighting current (in most cases 110 volts alternating current) was not suitable to operate the radio set. There was a need for some means by which the house lighting current could be made suitable to operate the radio set. The fundamental electrical principles by which the house lighting current might be adapted to operate the radio sets were well understood. By means of transformers it could be raised or lowered to the appropriate voltage; by means of rectifiers the alternating current could be converted into pulsating direct current; and by means of filtering devices comprising condensers and chokes the pulsations could be smoothed out so as to provide the steady direct current necessary. Nevertheless a satisfactory A-battery eliminator did not appear on the market until the advent of Ruben’s dry electrolytic condenser, and the reason was that until that condenser was produced nobody knew how to make a condenser which had sufficiently large capacity in sufficiently small volume at a low enough price. Several other expedients were resorted to. First came the home charger which, by means of a transformer and rectifier made it possible for the set owner to recharge the storage battery in his own home without having to take it to a garage or battery service station. Then came the trickle charger, a lower powered unit consisting of a transformer and a small rectifier which were connected to the house-lighting current and the storage battery in such a way that the battery was continuously recharged at a low rate (a trickle) at all times except when the radio set was in operation.

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Bluebook (online)
40 F. Supp. 551, 50 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 279, 1941 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2992, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ruben-v-ariston-laboratories-inc-ilnd-1941.