Ex Parte Farrell et alDownload PDFPatent Trial and Appeal BoardMay 3, 201612470911 (P.T.A.B. May. 3, 2016) Copy Citation UNITED STA TES p A TENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE APPLICATION NO. FILING DATE 12/470,911 31217 7590 Henkel Corporation One Henkel Way Rocky Hill, CT 06067 0512212009 05/05/2016 FIRST NAMED INVENTOR David Farrell UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE United States Patent and Trademark Office Address: COMMISSIONER FOR PATENTS P.O. Box 1450 Alexandria, Virginia 22313-1450 www .uspto.gov ATTORNEY DOCKET NO. CONFIRMATION NO. ICC-370/US 4804 EXAMINER CAI,WENWEN ART UNIT PAPER NUMBER 1763 NOTIFICATION DATE DELIVERY MODE 05/05/2016 ELECTRONIC Please find below and/or attached an Office communication concerning this application or proceeding. The time period for reply, if any, is set in the attached communication. Notice of the Office communication was sent electronically on above-indicated "Notification Date" to the following e-mail address( es): rhpatentmail@henkel.com trish.russo@henkel.com PTOL-90A (Rev. 04/07) UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE BEFORE THE PATENT TRIAL AND APPEAL BOARD Ex parte DAVID FARRELL, CIARAN B. MCARDLE, and MICHAEL DOHERTY1 Appeal2014-008090 Application 12/470,911 Technology Center 1700 Before TERRY J. OWENS, CHRISTOPHER C. KENNEDY, and DEBRA L. DENNETT, Administrative Patent Judges. DENNETT, Administrative Patent Judge. DECISION ON APPEAL 2 1 Appellants state the real party in interest is Henkel IP & Holding GmbH. Appeal Brief (App. Br.) 4. 2 In our opinion below, we refer to the Specification filed May 22, 2009 (Spec.), the Final Office Action mailed September 20, 2013 (Final Act.), the Amendment/Response to Office Action filed December 16, 2013 (Amendment), the Advisory Action mailed December 31, 2013 (Advisory Act.), the Appeal Brief filed March 17, 2014 (App. Br.), the Examiner's Answer mailed May 19, 2014 (Ans.), and the Reply Brief filed July 7, 2014 (Reply). Appeal2014-008090 Application 12/470,911 STATEMENT OF THE CASE Appellants appeal under 35 U.S.C. § 134 from a rejection of claims 1, 3, 5-9, and 23-25. We have jurisdiction under 35 U.S.C. § 6(b). We affirm. The claims are directed to a combination comprising a first and second substrate, one or both of which has a metal, metal oxide, or metal alloy surface, and a storage stable radically curable composition disposed between the substrates, resulting in cure of the radically curable composition and bonding of the first and second substrates together. Claim 1, reproduced below, is illustrative of the claimed subject matter: 1. A combination comprising a first substrate having a metal, metal oxide, or metal alloy surface, and a second substrate, a storage stable radically curable composition disposed between the substrates, the radically curable composition consisting essentially of: (i) a radically curable component; (ii) a free radical generating component; and (iii) at least one metal salt comprising a transition metal cation and a counterion selected from the group consisting of naphthenate, ethylhexanoate, benzoate, nitrate, chloride, acetylacetonate, ClQ4-, BF4-, PF6-, SbF6-, AsF6-, (C6Fs)4B-, (C6Fs)4Ga-, carborane, triflimide, bis-triflimide, and combinations thereof and having a standard reduction potential greater than the standard reduction potential of the surface of the first substrate, such that the metal salt is reduced at the surface of the first substrate, thereby interacting with the free radical generating component, initiating cure of the radically curable component of the composition, and bonding the first and second substrates together. 2 Appeal2014-008090 Application 12/470,911 App. Br. 22 (Claims App'x). The claims were amended after Final Rejection (Amendment 3-7) and the amendments were entered in the Advisory Action. The Reference Siobhan Moane, Declan P. Raftery, Malcolm R. Smyth, Raymond G. Leonard, Decomposition of peroxides by transition metal ions in anaerobic adhesive cure chemistry' 19 INT'L J. ADHESION & ADHESIVES 49-57 (1999) (hereinafter Moane ). The Rejections The Examiner's rejection of claims 23 and 24 under 35 U.S.C. § 112, first paragraph has been withdrawn. Claims 1, 3, and 5-9 stand rejected under 35 U.S.C §102(b) as being anticipated by Moane. Claims 23-25 stand rejected under 35U.S.C§103(a) as being obvious overMoane. OPINION The independent claims are claims 1 and 23-25. Rejection of claims 1, 3, and 5-9 as anticipated by Moane Appellants argue the rejection under 35 U.S.C. § 102(b) of claim 1 and its dependent claims 3 and 5-9 as a group. Accordingly, claims 1, 3, and 5-9 stand or fall together. At the outset, we note that the Examiner determines that claim 1 is a product-by-process claim, Final Act. 8, and the Appellants do not dispute that. "If the product in a product-by-process claim is the same as or obvious from a product of the prior art, the claim is unpatentable even though the 3 Appeal2014-008090 Application 12/470,911 prior product was made by a different process." Jn re Thorpe, 777 F.2d 695, 697 (Fed. Cir. 1985). The Examiner finds that Moane teaches an anaerobic adhesive confined between two closely fitting metal surfaces, the adhesive composition consisting of monomer, initiator, accelerator, active metal surface, and inhibitor/stabilizer. Final Act. 4--5 (citing Moane Abstract, 49). Methacrylate esters are described as the most commonly used monomers in commercial anaerobic products, and the most commonly applied initiators include cumene hydroperoxide, t-butyl hydroperoxide, and benzoyl peroxide. Moane 49. The reference discloses transition metal ions in general, and copper, iron, zinc, and cadmium ions in particular. Id. at title, 50. Transition metal salts disclosed in Moane include copper naphthenate, iron nitrate, cobalt nitrate, and copper chloride. Id. at 51. Claim 1 requires a storage stable radically curable composition disposed between the substrates consisting essentially of (1) a radically curable component, (2) a free radical generating component, and (3) at least one metal salt comprising a transition metal cation and a counterion selected from the group consisting of various compounds including naphthenate, nitrate, chloride, and combinations thereof. The radically curable component is analogous to the monomer of Moane. (See claim 7, which states "wherein the radically curable component has at least one functional group selected from the group consisting of ... methacrylates .... " App. Br. 23 (Claims App'x). The free radical generating component is analogous to the initiator of Moane. (See claim 6, which states "wherein the radical initiating component is selected from the group consisting of cumene hydroperoxide, tert-butyl hydroperoxide, ... , benzoyl peroxide, .... "). Id. 4 Appeal2014-008090 Application 12/470,911 Appellants do not dispute that Moane teaches what the Examiner says it does. Rather, Appellants contend that Moane does not disclose all the claim elements "arranged as in the claim." App. Br. 9-10 (citing Net MoneyIN, Inc. v. VeriSign, Inc., 545 F.3d 1359, 1370 (Fed. Cir. 2008)). For example, Appellants argue that Moane fails to disclose a storage stable radically curable composition disposed between two substrates, and distinguish their adhesive formulation as stable until contacted with a metal surface, which functions as the accelerant to cure the claimed composition. App. Br. 10. Appellants then assert that, unlike Moane, "no acids or accelerators are introduced into the claimed composition in order for the composition to cure under radical conditions." Id. Appellants further attempt to distinguish over Moane by stating that "[t]he addition of metal ions in Moane' s solution triggers peroxide decomposition in order to promote polymerization" (App. Br. 12), while "metal ions added to a storage stable peroxide-containing composition of Appellants' claimed invention" result in a composition that remains stable, without peroxide decomposition or polymerization. App. Br. 13 (emphasis in original). Appellants also contend that Moane "teaches away from a [sic] storage stable radically curable compositions in the claims" because Moane states that the experiments discussed in the reference are "not representative of the adhesive formulation matrix." App. Br. 12 (citing Moane 51-52). Any merit to Appellants' arguments is nullified by the undisputed fact that claim 1 is a product-by-process claim. As such, the determination of patentability is based on the product that results from the process, and not on the process itself. See In re Thorpe, 777 F .2d at 698 ("If the product in a product-by-process claims is the same as or obvious from a product of the 5 Appeal2014-008090 Application 12/470,911 prior art, the claim is unpatentable even though the prior product was made by a different process."). Although Appellants draw distinctions between the process taught in Moane and the process required by claim 1, they fail to articulate a patentable difference in the products that result from one process versus the other. Appellants contend that the Examiner is wrong in finding a metal salt inherently present in Moane's composition, as they say it would render the solution used by Moane unstable. App. Br. 12, Reply 2. However, the Examiner points out that a metal salt is inherently present after the solution used by Moane is placed between metal substrates, with acids in the solution releasing transition metal ions in the form of metal salt from the substrate surface. Ans. 2-3, Final Act. 4--5. Thus, Appellants view the issue as whether metal salts could be present in the solution used by Moane before it is applied to a metal substrate (i.e., before the process is complete), and the Examiner views the issue as whether metal salts are present after such application, when the substrates are bonded together. We find that the Examiner provides sufficient scientific reasoning for his inference, permissible under In re Best, 562 F.2d 1252, 1255 (CCPA 1977) ("vVhere, as here, the claimed and prior art products are identical or substantia11y identical, or are produced by identical or substantially identical processes) the PTO can require an applicant to prove that the prior art products do not necessarily or inherently possess the characteristics of his claimed product''); see also In re Spada, 911 F.2d 705, 708 (Fed. Cir. 1990) ("[W]hen the PTO shows sound basis for believing that the products of the applicant and the prior art are the same, the applicant has the burden of showing that they are not."). 6 Appeal2014-008090 Application 12/470,911 Appellants have not identified reversible error in the Examiner's rejection of claim 1 as anticipated by Moane. Accordingly, and because claims 3 and 5-9 stand or fall with claim 1, we sustain the rejection under 3 5 U.S.C. § 102(b) of claims 1, 3, and 5-9 overMoane. Rejection of claims 23-25 as obvious over Moane Each of independent claims 23-25 requires a storage stable radically curable composition consisting essentially of at least two metal salts, one metal salt having a standard reduction potential greater than the standard reduction potential of one substrate, and a second metal salt having a standard reduction potential greater than the standard reduction potential of the other substrate. App. Br. 24--25 (Claims App'x). The Examiner acknowledges that Moane does not teach the adhesive comprising at least two metal salts, but finds that Moane teaches the adhesive works well on iron- and copper-rich surfaces. Final Act. 6. Thus, the Examiner finds that it would have been obvious to one of ordinary skill in the art at the time the invention was made to at once envisage bonding an iron surface and a copper surface to generate a composition containing iron salt and copper salt. Id. Appellants contend that"[ o ]ne of ordinary skill in the art would not deduce from Moane that the metal ion solutions are part of a storage stable adhesive composition as in the claimed invention." App. Br. 18. Here, as is the case with claim 1, Appellants fail to recognize that claims 23-25 are product-by-process claims, and the issue is whether metal salts are present when the substrates are bonded together. For claims 23-25, we find that the Examiner provides sufficient scientific reasoning for his inference, permissible under In re Best, 562 F.2d at 1255. 7 Appeal2014-008090 Application 12/470,911 The Examiner also finds the standard reduction potential of the iron and copper salt is greater than that of the metal surfaces. As Appellants do not challenge this finding, we take it as fact. Finally, with respect to claims 23 and 25, Appellants argue that Moane does not teach a storage stable composition disposed between two substrates as arranged, and refer us to their argument for claim 1 on this issue. App. Br. 19. For reasons provided above, we find Appellants' argument unpersuasive. Appellants have not identified reversible error in the Examiner's rejection of claims 23-25 as rendered obvious over Moane. DECISION/ORDER For the above reasons, the Examiner's rejection of claims 1, 3, 5-9 and 23-25 is AFFIRMED. No time period for taking any subsequent action in connection with this appeal may be extended under 37 C.F.R. § 1.136(a)(l )(iv) (2009). AFFIRMED 8 Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation