Westinghouse Electric & Mfg. Co. v. Radio Corp. of America

24 F. Supp. 933, 1938 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1807
CourtDistrict Court, D. Delaware
DecidedOctober 6, 1938
DocketNo. 1183
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 24 F. Supp. 933 (Westinghouse Electric & Mfg. Co. v. Radio Corp. of America) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Westinghouse Electric & Mfg. Co. v. Radio Corp. of America, 24 F. Supp. 933, 1938 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1807 (D. Del. 1938).

Opinion

NIELDS, District Judge.

This is a suit in equity “to receive a patent” under Section 4915, U.S.Rev.St., 35 [934]*934U.S.C.A. § 63. Westinghouse Electric & Manufacturing .Company, plaintiff, is the owner of patent applications by Vladimir K. Zworykin, and Radio Corporation of America, defendant, is the owner of a pat- . ent application by Henry Joseph Round.

Zworykin application Serial No.' 683,-337 was filed December 29, 1923. Zworykin application Serial No. 448,834 was filed May 1, 1930. Round application Serial No. 608,324 was filed April 29, 1932, for a reissue of the Round patent No. 1,759,594 issued May 20, 1930, on application filed May 11, 1927. Three interferences were declared in the patent office between Zworykin, Round and other parties who were subsequently eliminated.

Zworykin moved to substitute for his 1930 application his application Serial No. 683,337 filed December 29, 1923. He repeated this motion in each of the three interferences. The examiner of interferences denied his motion in each interference, on the ground that the Zworykin 1923 application, as filed, did not disclose the inventions of the claims in issue. This motion was also denied on the ground that Zworykin’s right to the claims in his 1923 application depended upon certain amendments which he had made to the specification but which the examiner held to be departures therefrom.

In the matter of priority, Round relied upon the filing date of his British application 'May 21, 1926. Zworykin stood on his 1923 filing date. The examiner of interferences awarded priority to Round. The board of appeals affirmed these actions of the examiner of interferences. The present suit was then brought by the plaintiff to obtain the claims denied Zworykin. Photo-Electric Cell Containing Invention. .

The subject matter of this litigation is a method and apparatus for use in television. Zworykin is recognized as the pioneer inventor in television. The system being developed in the United States and Great Britain is called the Zworykin system. In 1919 he came from Russia to this country equipped in science but not correspondingly versed in the nice use of English. December 29, 1923 he filed his first application. That application has been through one interference after another; is still pending in the patent office and is the heart of this controversy.

We do not have to go into the complexities of the electrical transmitting and receiving circuits. The issues in dispute are concerned with only one element -of the transmitting system, the construction of the photo-electric cell. If in 1923 Zworykin filed an application disclosing a photo-sensitive plate of a specific construction, then Zworykin is entitled to the award of priority. The entire controversy concerns that one question.

It will be necessary briefly to explain the structure of the photo-electric cell. This element is composed of three layers, á rear layer of aluminum foil which is a conductor, an intermediate layer of aluminum oxide which is an insulator, and a front layer of potassium which is photosensitive and in the form of discrete particles. Owing to the surface tension of potassium the discrete particles assume a globular form. The photo-electric material responds to light impinging upon it. The amount of response depends upon the intensity of the light. In a photographic film or plate, effects are obtained because the rays of light from the'object affect the sensitive material in varying extents, running the whole range from dark to light.

This light affects the photo-electric material but the effect is different. Assuming an object in front of the lens, the quantity of light falling on the respective areas of the potassium layer will of course vary in accordance with the varying intensity of the light reflected from different portions of the object. Each area (or particle) of the potassium will then emit electrons in proportion to the amount of “tone value” of the light falling thereon. As electrons are negative charges of electricity, each area of potassium will thereby become positively charged to an amount which is proportional to the number of electrons lost, and therefore also in direct proportion to the tone value of- the light falling thereon. Hence there is a difference between the positive charges on the various potassium areas which is in exact accordance with the variations in light which make visible the object being viewed. As each potassium area is separated from the aluminum foil by insulating material (aluminum oxide), each potassium area forms one element of a condenser, and the quantity of charge in each condenser is in direct proportion to the quantity of light falling on the corresponding area of potassium. If these numerous condensers are now connected in sequence into a circuit, the current flowing in the circuit will obviously [935]*935vary in accordance with the successive charges of the respective condensers as they are brought into the circuit in sequence.

But this circuit is not complete because of the presence of the aluminum oxide insulator in each of the numerous condenser cells. Means are accordingly provided whereby the potassium and aluminum of these cells are electrically connected in sequence through the aluminum oxide. In order that persistence of vision may be obtained, all of these numerous cells must be sequentially brought into the circuit in less than one-sixteenth of a second. As in motion picture projection, the illusion of motion is caused because successive pictures are thrown onto the screen at a rate which exceeds sixteen to the second, because the human eye can not distinguish between different views appearing one after the other at so rapid a rate. To avoid mechanically moving parts Zworykin has provided a very rapidly moving cathode-ray beam, known as a scanning ray, which moves across the photo-electric element to pierce the aluminum oxide and bring all of the numerous cells in sequence into the circuit in a thirty-second of a second.

As the cathode ray is composed of electrons or negative charges of electricity, and as at each point of impingement of the cathode ray on the aluminum it penetrates not only the aluminum but also the aluminum oxide, the potassium of each cell, as its aluminum oxide insulation is penetrated, is thus brought into circuit with the aluminum, discharging that particular cell. Thus as the ray scans the photo-electric element it passes from cell to cell, connecting each cell in sequence into the circuit, and thereby varying or “modulating” the current that is sent out through the amplifying system to the antenna in accordance with the charges on the respective cells. Hence the current going to the antenna is a continuously varying current that changes from instant to instant in accordance with the charges on the respective cells sequentially connected into the circuit by the scanning ray. This phenomonon is taken advantage of as a means of varying or modulating the radio waves sent out by the antenna.

The physical condition of the potassium surface is a matter of critical importance. If this surface were a continuous layer of potassium, so that every part were in conductive relationship with every other part, it would not matter where the beam penetrated. The entire face of the plate would be connected up with the entire rear face of the plate and the differential in photoelectric effect over the various portions of the face of the plate would be lost.' On the other hand, if this potassium is composed of separated parts or discrete particles, then each particle is out of contact with every other particle.

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Bluebook (online)
24 F. Supp. 933, 1938 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1807, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/westinghouse-electric-mfg-co-v-radio-corp-of-america-ded-1938.