Southern Electro-Chemical Co. v. E. I. Du Pont De Nemours & Co.

9 F.2d 69, 1925 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1299
CourtDistrict Court, D. New Jersey
DecidedAugust 14, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 9 F.2d 69 (Southern Electro-Chemical Co. v. E. I. Du Pont De Nemours & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Southern Electro-Chemical Co. v. E. I. Du Pont De Nemours & Co., 9 F.2d 69, 1925 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1299 (D.N.J. 1925).

Opinion

BODINE, District Judge.

This suit charges the defendant with infringement of claims 1, 3, and 5 of United States letters patent to Harry Pauling, No. 1,031,864, granted July 9, 1912, for method of concentrating nitric acid', and assigned to and owned by the plaintiff. The bill prays an injunction and an accounting for profits and damages.

The bill of complaint was filed May 15, 1920, and defendant replied by answer filed October 20,1920, amended November 6,1922, further amended December 26, 1922, and again amended February 16, 1923. As defendant’s answer thus amended presented 171 patents and publications, both United States and foreign, showing an alleged anticipation and the prior art, on February 5, 1923, the defendant was required to furnish a bill of particulars as to the patents and publications to be relied upon to illustrate the prior art. The defendant eliminated over 100 references.

[70]*70On April 11, 1923, while the rebutting testimony of Dr. McKee, one of plaintiff’s experts, was in progress, the court permitted the defendant, to make certain tests, under certain conditions, upon an apparatus at its plant at Kepaupo, N. J. Prom May 8 to-12, 1923, defendant, in the presence of plaintiff’s representatives, conducted these tests. Defendant then took the testimony of its witnesses as to the tests.

Plaintiff then erected at Warners, N. J., certain tower apparatus for the purpose of conducting tests in rebuttal^ of defendant’s tests. On March 17, 1924, the tower apparatus at Warners, N. J., having been completed, plaintiff made the tests in the presence of defendant’s representatives. The testimony as to . these tests is to be found in the record. 'Dr. McKee, in resuming his rebuttal testimony, stated his views. There is also testimony as to laboratory tests made at Columbia University at the instigation of the plaintiff..

The record is exhaustive of the 'subjeet'matter. 'Counsel have sought to illuminate a very difficult ease with infinite patience and skill. The invention is best described in the specifications of the letters patent. It is well, however, to bear in mind, in this connection, that nitric acid usuallycontains about 50 per cent, of water; that boiling beyond a certain point will not eliminate the water without carrying off the nitric acid. The prior art was familiar with a batch process of water elimination carried on by mixing sulphuric acid with the nitrie acid and applying heat; the sulphuric acid locking up the water and carrying it off in evaporation. This process was bulky and expensive.

. In the manufacture of explosives, particularly nitrocellulose compounds, the spirit acids contain a mixture of sulphuric acid, nitric acid, impurities, and water. The elimination of the water and impurities and the obtaining of pure sulphuric acid is known as a denitrifying process. This process was, for years, carried on in a tower; the strongest nitric acid obtained being from 50 to 65 per cent.

It is the plaintiff’s contention that the de7 nitrifying and the high concentration combined in one apparatus was Pauling’s contribution to the art; nitrie acid up to, 98 per cent, of concentration being obtained by the use of his tower. Pauling used a path described as of sufficient length to give the steam time to condense into water and be locked up by the sulphuric acid, and asserts that the best results are obtained by the use of acids free from' organic matter.

The specifications of the letters patent are as follows:

“This invention relates to processes of eoneentrating nitrie acid, and it comprises passing aqueous nitrie acid in mixture with sulphuric acid or other suitable dehydrating agent against a counterflowing current of steam, or of a mixture of a large proportion of steam with gases inert toward nitrie acid; the conditions of operation being such that highly concentrated vapors of nitric acid are obtained, while the water originally present in the aqueous nitrie acid is substantially all taken up and retained by the dehydrating^ agent.
“A known method of concentrating nitrie acid consists in subjecting the :aeid to a kind of countercurrent treatment, for. example, by introducing the nitrie acid and a drying agent, preferably sulphuric acid, into a vertical pipe, at the upper end, and heating1 the pipe from the outside. This necessitates apparatus of large dimensions, since, in order to avoid the formation of nitroso-sulphurie acid the temperature must not be raised too high. ’ Nitroso-sulphurie acid, if formed, can only be decomposed by high dilution, and dilution is, of course, contrary to the purpose of the process. Moreover, the filling,mass placed in the pipe cannot be so arranged as to secure perfectly uniform distribution of the mixture, so that local overheating and decomposition of nitrie acid occurs. Similar disadvantages attend the proposed method of passing the mixture downward through a column through which hot air or other gases are passed in an upward direction, in order to supply heat for distilling off the nitric acid. The air must not be too hot, for the reason already mentioned; so that a large quantity of air and large apparatus are required. The nitrie acid vapor is highly diluted with air (or other gas), and this dilution favors decomposition of the acid and considerably interferes with condensation of the vapors. The hot air or other gas carries away a certain proportion of acid, which is lost. The present’ invention obviates these disadvantages, while 'securing certain new advantages, and involves the use of steam, or a mixture of steam and gas, as the heat carrier flowing as a countercurrent against a stream of nitrie acid and sulphuric acid or other hygroscopic substance. During the passage of the steam the nitrie acid is almost wholly separated from the mixture; the team is gradually absorbed by the sulphuric acid, and converted into water, whereby its latent heat is liberated and utilized for evaporation of nitrie acid. This process [71]*71takes place along the whole common path of the streams, and by using a path of sufficient length nitric acid of the highest possible concentration is obtained, and practically all traces of nitric acid are removed from the sulphuric acid. The best results are obtained with mixtures free from impurities, such as organic matter, nitrogen oxides, and nitroso-sulphurie acid. Under the conditions of operation here contemplated, nitric acid of 96 to 98 per cent, strength is easily obtained from a mixture containing one part of 48 per cent, nitric acid to two parts of 94 per cent, sulphuric a.cid; the whole of the nitric acid being obtained at the strength stated.
“The most simple method of carrying out the process comprises passing the mixture of acids through a vertical pipe or column from the top downward, and passing in dry steam at the bottom; the pipe being partly filled with a suitable Tilling’ mass. Preferably the steam is superheated, but this is not essential. Instead of pure steam, inert gases mixed with a large proportion of steam may be used. 'Countercurrent’ apparatus other than a vertical column may he used. The rate at which the hot gaseous medium is supplied to the base of the column should, of course, be so regulated that highly concentrated nitric acid vapors leave the outlet at the top of the column, while the spent sulphuric acid leaving the base of the column retains substantially all the water originally present in the dilute nitric acid.”

The claims in suit are the first, third, and fifth as follows:

“1.

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Bluebook (online)
9 F.2d 69, 1925 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1299, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-electro-chemical-co-v-e-i-du-pont-de-nemours-co-njd-1925.