Demaray LLCDownload PDFPatent Trials and Appeals BoardMay 12, 2021IPR2021-00105 (P.T.A.B. May. 12, 2021) Copy Citation Trials@uspto.gov Paper 13 571-272-7822 Date: May 12, 2021 UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE BEFORE THE PATENT TRIAL AND APPEAL BOARD APPLIED MATERIALS, INC., Petitioner, v. DEMARAY LLC, Patent Owner. IPR2021-00105 Patent 7,544,276 B2 Before CHRISTOPHER L. CRUMBLEY, KRISTINA M. KALAN, and KIMBERLY McGRAW, Administrative Patent Judges. Opinion for the Board filed by Administrative Patent Judge KALAN. Opinion Concurring filed by Administrative Patent Judge CRUMBLEY. KALAN, Administrative Patent Judge. DECISION Denying Institution of Inter Partes Review 35 U.S.C. § 314 IPR2021-00105 Patent 7,544,276 B2 2 I. INTRODUCTION Applied Materials, Inc. (“Petitioner”) filed a Petition (Paper 1, “Pet.”) requesting inter partes review of claims 1–13 of U.S. Patent No. 7,544,276 B2 (Ex. 1001, “the ’276 patent”). Demaray LLC (“Patent Owner”) filed a Preliminary Response to the Petition (Paper 8, “Prelim. Resp.”). Pursuant to our authorization (Paper 9), Petitioner filed a Reply (Paper 10, “Reply”), and Patent Owner filed a Sur-Reply (Paper 12, “Sur-Reply”). Petitioner also filed a Petitioner’s Notice Regarding Multiple Petitions (Paper 2 (“Notice”)) to which Patent Owner filed a Response (Paper 7 (“Notice Response”)). To institute inter partes review, we must determine that the information presented in the Petition shows “there is a reasonable likelihood that the petitioner would prevail with respect to at least 1 of the claims challenged in the petition.” 35 U.S.C. § 314(a). The Board, however, has discretion to deny a petition even when a petitioner meets that threshold. Id.; see, e.g., Cuozzo Speed Techs., LLC v. Lee, 136 S. Ct. 2131, 2140 (2016) (“[T]he agency’s decision to deny a petition is a matter committed to the Patent Office’s discretion.”); General Plastic Indus. Co. v. Canon Kabushiki Kaisha, IPR2016-01357, Paper 19 (PTAB Sept. 6, 2017) (precedential as to § II.B.4.i) (recognizing the same); see also Patent Trial and Appeal Board Consolidated Trial Practice Guide (Nov. 2019) (“CTPG”) 55–63, available at https://www.uspto.gov/TrialPracticeGuideConsolidated (identifying considerations that may warrant exercise of this discretion). For the reasons discussed below, after considering the parties’ submissions and the evidence of record, we determine it is appropriate to exercise our discretion and decline to institute inter partes review. IPR2021-00105 Patent 7,544,276 B2 3 A. Related Proceedings The parties identify IPR2021-00103 as another proceeding filed by Petitioner against the ’276 patent. Pet. 6–7; Paper 6, 2. Patent Owner also identifies IPR2021-00104 and IPR2021-00106, which challenge U.S. Patent No. 7,381,657 B2, as related matters. Paper 6, 2. The parties also identify Applied Materials, Inc. v. Demaray LLC, No. 5-20-cv-05676 (N.D. Cal.); Demaray LLC v. Samsung Electronics Co., No. 6-20-cv-00636 (W.D. Tex.); and Demaray LLC v. Intel Corporation, No. 6- 20-cv-00634 (W.D. Tex.) as related matters. Pet. 6; Paper 6, 2. Each of these proceedings involves the ’276 patent. Id. B. Real Parties-In-Interest Petitioner identifies Intel Corporation, Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd., Samsung Electronics America, Inc., Samsung Semiconductor, Inc., Samsung Austin Semiconductor, LLC, and itself as real parties-in-interest. Pet. 6. Patent Owner identifies itself as a real party-in-interest. Paper 6, 2. C. The ’276 Patent The ’276 patent, titled “Biased Pulse DC Reactive Sputtering of Oxide Films,” relates to “deposition of oxide and oxynitride films and, in particular, to deposition of oxide and oxynitride films by pulsed DC reactive sputtering.” Ex. 1001, code (54), 1:12–14. The ’276 patent discloses that typically, radio frequency (“RF”) sputtering has been used for deposition of oxide dielectric films, but arcing can occur between sputtering target tiles used to make such films, which causes contamination of the deposited films. Id. at 2:25–30. The ’276 patent further states that reactors for RF sputtering, particularly their power systems, are complicated. Id. at 2:30–38. The ’276 patent discloses that reactive DC magnetron sputtering of nonconductive IPR2021-00105 Patent 7,544,276 B2 4 oxides “is done rarely” because insulating surfaces accumulate charge during deposition and result in arcing, which “can damage the power supply, produce particles and degrade the properties of deposited oxide films.” Id. at 4:44–52. Figure 1A of the ’276 patent is reproduced below. Figure 1A depicts a pulsed DC sputtering reactor. Id. at 3:26–27. The ’276 patent describes reactor apparatus 10 for sputtering of material from target 12. Id. at 5:7–9. Magnet 20 is scanned across the top of target 12, which reduces local erosion of target 12 during sputtering. Id. at 5:28–29, 8:47–55. Substrate 16 is opposite and parallel to target 12. Id. at 5:23–24. Substrate 16 is capacitively coupled to electrode 17 via insulator 54. Id. at 5:26–27. Electrode 17 can be coupled to RF power supply 18. Id. at 5:27–28. The ’276 patent explains that columnar structures in a deposited film can be detrimental for optical wave guide applications, but applying an RF bias on substrate 16 during deposition can substantially eliminate columnar structures. Id. at 5:60–67. The ’276 patent discloses that target 12 IPR2021-00105 Patent 7,544,276 B2 5 functions as a cathode when power is applied to it, which creates plasma 53. Id. at 5:24–26. Target 12 is electrically coupled through filter 15 to pulsed DC power supply 14. Id. at 5:19–20. The ’276 patent discloses that the polarity of the power supplied to target 12 by the pulsed DC power supply 14 oscillates between negative and positive potentials. Id. at 5:30–33. According to the ’276 patent, the insulating layer on the surface of target 12 discharges during the positive period, which prevents arcing. Id. at 5:33–35. The ’276 patent discloses that the pulsing frequency must exceed a critical frequency, which depends on a target material, cathode current, and reverse time. Id. at 5:35–37. Reactor apparatus 10 further includes filter 15, which prevents RF power supply 18 from coupling into pulsed DC power supply 14. Id. at 5:50–51. According to the ’276 patent, filter 15 can be a 2 MHz band rejection filter when a 2 MHz power supply is used for RF power supply 18. Id. at 5:51–55. The ’276 patent discloses that “the band width of the filter 15 can be approximately 100 kHz.” Id. at 5:55–57. D. Illustrative Claim Claims 1 and 6 of the ’276 patent are independent. Claim 1 is representative and is reproduced below: 1. A reactor according to the present invention, comprising: a target area for receiving a target; a substrate area opposite the target area for receiving a substrate; a pulsed DC power supply coupled to the target area, the pulsed DC power supply providing alternating negative and positive voltages to the target; an RF bias power supply coupled to the substrate; and IPR2021-00105 Patent 7,544,276 B2 6 a narrow band-rejection filter that rejects at a frequency of the RE1 bias power supply coupled between the pulsed DC power supply and the target area. Ex. 1001, 22:40–50. E. The Asserted Grounds of Unpatentability Petitioner contends that claims 1–13 of the ’276 patent are unpatentable on the following grounds. Pet. 13. Reference(s) Basis Claim(s) Challenged Licata,2 Kelly,3 Collins4 § 103 1–3, 6–8 Licata, Kelly, Collins, Aokura5 § 103 4, 5 Licata, Kelly, Collins, Dogheche6 § 103 9, 10 Licata, Kelly, Collins, Doessel7 § 103 11–13 In support of its unpatentability arguments, Petitioner relies on the declaration of Dr. Vivek Subramanian. Ex. 1002 (“Subramanian Declaration”). Patent Owner relies on the declaration of Dr. Alexander Glew. Ex. 2002 (“Glew Declaration”). 1 This appears to be a typographical error that should read “RF” instead of “RE.” 2 US 6,132,564 A, issued Oct. 17, 2000 (Ex. 1010). 3 P. J. Kelly et al., Reactive pulsed magnetron sputtering process for alumina films, J. of Vacuum Sci. & Tech., A 18, 2890 (2000) (Ex. 1059). 4 US 6,077,384 A, issued June 20, 2000 (Ex. 1071). 5 JP H10102247 A, published Apr. 21, 1998 (Ex. 1068) ((English translation (pp. 1–12); Verified Statement of Translation (p. 12); Japanese language document (pp. 14–24). 6 E. Dogheche, Growth and optical characterization of aluminum nitride thin films deposited on silicon by radio-frequency sputtering, Appl. Phys. Lett. 74, 1209 (1999) (Ex. 1029). 7 US 5,527,605 A, issued June 18, 1996 (Ex. 1070). IPR2021-00105 Patent 7,544,276 B2 7 II. ANALYSIS A. Discretion under 35 U.S.C. § 314(a) - Multiple Petitions When evaluating whether to institute trial on more than one concurrently-filed petition addressing the same patent, we are guided by our Consolidated Trial Practice Guide, which states: Based on the Board’s prior experience, one petition should be sufficient to challenge the claims of a patent in most situations. Two or more petitions filed against the same patent at or about the same time . . . may place a substantial and unnecessary burden on the Board and the patent owner and could raise fairness, timing, and efficiency concerns. See U.S.C. § 316(b). . . . Nonetheless, the Board recognizes that there may be circumstances in which more than one petition may be necessary, including, for example, when the patent owner has asserted a large number of claims in litigation or when there is a dispute about priority date requiring arguments under multiple prior art references. In such cases two petitions by a petitioner may be needed, although this should be rare. CTPG 59. Here, Petitioner filed two petitions on the same day, both challenging claims 1–13 of the ’276 patent. In the present petition, Petitioner challenges claims 1–13 on grounds based on Licata, Kelly, and Collins in combination with a number of other references. Notice 1; Pet. 13. In the petition in IPR2021-00103, Petitioner challenges claims 1–13 of the ’276 patent on grounds based on Barber and Hirose in combination with other references. IPR2021-00103, Paper 1, 3–5. Petitioner argues that the Board should institute both petitions because Patent Owner has asserted claims of the ’276 patent against real parties-in- interest Intel and Samsung in separate district court litigations. Notice 1–2. Petitioner asserts that by coordinating efforts with its real parties-in-interest, IPR2021-00105 Patent 7,544,276 B2 8 including Intel and Samsung, and presenting only two petitions challenging the ’276 patent, this “minimiz[es] issues arising from these multiple parties for the Board, despite the wealth of prior art against the ’276 patent’s broad claims.” Id. at 2–3. Petitioner also argues that there are material differences between the petitions that warrant institution of both petitions, and that the Board has routinely instituted two parallel petitions under similar circumstances. Id. at 3–5. We are not persuaded that Petitioner’s arguments justify a second petition challenging claims 1–13 of the ’276 patent. First, we disagree with Petitioner’s argument that its coordinated efforts with Samsung and Intel to present two petitions against the ’276 patent result in “minimizing issues from these multiple parties for the Board.” Notice 2–3. Significantly, neither Samsung nor Intel are petitioners in the present proceeding, and neither Samsung nor Intel have made any representation that they will not file a petition challenging claims of the ’276 patent. At most, Petitioner asserts that “as of their filing, [the two petitions filed by Petitioner] are the only challenges to the ’276 patent before the Office.” Id. at 4. We decline to infer from Petitioner’s representations whether Samsung or Intel will file, or will not file, other petitions challenging the ’276 patent. As such, Petitioner has not shown that its efforts minimize potential issues from multiple parties for the Board. We further note that if another party chooses to file a petition challenging claims of the ’276 patent, we would determine at that time whether to institute any such petition. See Valve Corp. v. Elec. Scripting Prods., Inc., IPR2019- 00062, 00063, -00084, Paper 11, 2 (PTAB Apr. 2, 2019) (precedential) (stating that “when different petitioners challenge the same patent, we IPR2021-00105 Patent 7,544,276 B2 9 consider any relationship between those petitioners when weighing the General Plastic factors”); see also CTPG 56–58 (stating that the Board will consider the General Plastic factors when determining whether to institute a trial). Second, we are not persuaded that material differences exist between the claim analyses presented in this Petition and the petition filed in IPR2021-00103. Petitioner argues that the IPR2021-00103 petition relies on references not of record during prosecution, whereas the present Petition relies on Kelly, which was of record during prosecution, although not applied by the Examiner. Notice 3. Petitioner does not sufficiently explain why Petitioner’s assertion of art (i.e., Kelly) that was before the Examiner in its second-ranked petition is material or justifies the institution of a second petition. See CTPG 60 (stating Petitioner should provide “a succinct explanation of the differences between the petitions, why the issues addressed by the differences are material, and why the Board should exercise its discretion to institute additional petitions if it identifies one petition that satisfies petitioner’s burden under 35 U.S.C. § 314(a)”). For example, Petitioner does not explain why, if the Board institutes the first- ranked petition that asserts art that was not before the Examiner, the Board should also institute a second petition that relies on art that was before the Examiner. Therefore, Petitioner’s arguments are not persuasive. We also disagree with Petitioner’s contention that the petitions present different approaches to the claim limitations. Notice 3–4. Petitioner asserts that the IPR2021-00103 petition presents grounds based on Barber, which does not expressly disclose the filter claimed by the ’276 patent, whereas the grounds of this proceeding include Licata, which describes “an RF filter IPR2021-00105 Patent 7,544,276 B2 10 between an RF power source and a pulse DC power source but does not expressly disclose the bipolar aspects of the DC power source.” Id. at 3. Petitioner also asserts that the IPR2021-00103 petition also relies on Hirose to disclose the claimed filter, whereas this proceeding relies on Collins. Id. In addition, Petitioner argues that “due to the nature of the challenged claims, and the relevant prior art available, Petitioner had to separate the grounds into separate petitions in order to ensure the different grounds contained the necessary specificity.” Id. at 4. Patent Owner responds that the two petitions use one or two base references (i.e., Barber, or Barber and Belkind, in the IPR2021-00103 petition, and Licata and Kelly in this proceeding) for the claimed reactor and either Hirose or Collins for the claimed filter. Notice Response 2–4. Patent Owner argues that the Petitions start with the same base reactor system without a filter, and then make the same design-choice argument that it would have been obvious to add the claimed filter. Id. at 5. Patent Owner’s arguments illustrate that there are more similarities than material differences between the challenges set forth in the petitions. Petitioner’s arguments highlight these similarities by stating that “Petition 1 relies on Hirose to disclose the claimed filter aspects, whereas Petition 2 relies on Collins.” Notice 3. Although the references relied on by the petitions to disclose the claimed reactor system differ, the petitions present similar scenarios in which base references are relied on for the reactor and another reference is relied on to disclose the claimed filter. As such, we disagree that Petitioner’s reliance on different art in each proceeding is a reason to institute multiple proceedings. IPR2021-00105 Patent 7,544,276 B2 11 Petitioner has identified no special circumstances, such as the examples provided in the Consolidated Trial Practice Guide, that would justify a second inter partes review of the same patent. The ’276 patent contains a relatively small number of claims (13 claims) (Ex. 1001, 22:40– 24:13), the claims themselves are not particularly long, and evaluating the claims does not require analysis of a large number of limitations. Nor is there an alternative potential claim construction that requires Petitioner to set forth an alternative set of grounds, nor does there appear to be any dispute, at this time, as to the priority date of the ’276 patent. See generally Pet.; Prelim. Resp. Finally, we disagree with Petitioner that the Board has routinely instituted two parallel petitions under similar circumstances. Notice 4. None of the proceedings identified by Petitioner present similar circumstances to those presented here. The petitions before us do not involve, for example, a possible antedating issue for a reference cited in the challenges, as in IPR2019-00290 to -002938 or IPR2019-00237 to -00239.9 The petitions before us also do not involve, for example, challenges under 35 U.S.C. § 112 in the first petition and prior art challenges in the other petitions, as in PGR2019-00037, PGR2019-00040, and PGR2019-00042. We have determined that there are no material differences between the analyses presented in the first and the second petitions, and that the first and second petitions do not address claim limitations in different ways that could cause different outcomes, distinguishing these cases from IPR2019-01223 to 8 The petitions in IPR2019-00291 and IPR2019-00293 were denied under Section 314 as improper multiple petitions. IPR2019-00291, Paper 16, 8. 9 The petition in IPR2019-00238 was denied under Section 314 as an improper multiple petition. IPR2019-00238, Paper 15, 8. IPR2021-00105 Patent 7,544,276 B2 12 -01227 and IPR2019-01464 and IPR2019-01465. Finally, IPR2019-00165 and IPR2019-00171 did not involve multiple petitions against the same patent and inter partes review was instituted in only one of those proceedings. In view of the above, Petitioner has not adequately explained why the Petition in this proceeding contains sufficient material differences in its analysis to support instituting an additional inter partes review of the challenged claims. We acknowledge Petitioner’s novel arguments, including its “collaboration” argument and its “wealth of prior art” argument, but are not persuaded that these are sufficient reasons to justify instituting inter partes review on two parallel petitions, nor are we directed to any persuasive authority indicating that the Board has adopted a practice of doing so. Accordingly, because we institute an inter partes review of claims 1–13 of the ’276 patent on the grounds presented in the IPR2021- 00103 petition, we exercise our discretion under § 314(a) to deny institution in this proceeding. III. CONCLUSION For the reasons set forth above, we determine that the circumstances weigh in favor of discretionary denial of this Petition. Accordingly, we exercise our discretion to deny institution under 35 U.S.C. § 314(a). IV. ORDER In consideration of the foregoing, it is hereby: ORDERED that the Petition is denied and no trial is instituted. IPR2021-00105 Patent 7,544,276 B2 13 UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE BEFORE THE PATENT TRIAL AND APPEAL BOARD APPLIED MATERIALS, INC., Petitioner, v. DEMARAY LLC, Patent Owner. IPR2021-00105 Patent 7,544,276 B2 Before CHRISTOPHER L. CRUMBLEY, KRISTINA M. KALAN, and KIMBERLY McGRAW, Administrative Patent Judges. CRUMBLEY, Administrative Patent Judge, concurring in the result. I concur in result only. IPR2021-00105 Patent 7,544,276 B2 14 FOR PETITIONER: Naveen Modi Joseph E. Palys PAUL HASTINGS LLP naveenmodi@paulhastings.com josephpalys@paulhastings.com PH-Applied_Materials-DemarayIPR@paulhastings.com FOR PATENT OWNER: H. Annita Zhong Benjamin Hattenbach C. Maclain Wells IRELL & MANELLA LLP hzhong@irell.com bhattenbach@irell.com mwells@irell.com DemarayIPRs@irell.com Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation