Ex Parte JeongDownload PDFPatent Trial and Appeal BoardFeb 8, 201612010868 (P.T.A.B. Feb. 8, 2016) Copy Citation UNITED STA TES p A TENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE APPLICATION NO. FILING DATE 12/010,868 01/30/2008 8439 7590 02/10/2016 ROBERT E BUSHNELL & LAW FIRM 2029 K STREET NW SUITE 600 WASHINGTON, DC 20006-1004 FIRST NAMED INVENTOR Dong-Ho Jeong 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. P58442 1076 EXAMINER GILLIAM, BARBARA LEE ART UNIT PAPER NUMBER 1727 NOTIFICATION DATE DELIVERY MODE 02/10/2016 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): rebushnell@aol.com mail@rebushnell.com info@rebushnell.com PTOL-90A (Rev. 04/07) UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE BEFORE THE PATENT TRIAL AND APPEAL BOARD Ex parte DONG-HO JEONG1 Appeal2013-010684 Application 12/010,868 Technology Center 1700 Before BRADLEY R. GARRIS, CHRISTOPHER C. KENNEDY, and JULIA HEANEY, Administrative Patent Judges. KENNEDY, Administrative Patent Judge. DECISION ON APPEAL STATEMENT OF THE CASE This is an appeal under 35 U.S.C. § 134(a) from a final rejection of claims 1-3, 5-7, 15-1 7, 19, and 2 0. An oral hearing was held on January 12, 2016. We have jurisdiction under 35 U.S.C. § 6(b). We AFFIRM. 1 According to the Appellant, the real party in interest is Samsung SDI Co., Ltd. App. Br. 3. Appeal2013-010684 Application 12/010,868 BACKGROUND The invention relates to a current collector for the electrode of a battery. Spec. iJ 2; Claim 1. Claim 1 is reproduced below from page 32 (Claims Appendix) of the Appeal Brief: 1. An electrode for a battery, comprising: a thin plate current collector; and an active material layer coated on the current collector, the current collector including a coated current collector part and an uncoated current collector part adjacent to the coated current collector part, both collector parts being arranged on a top surface of the current collector, wherein the uncoated current collector part has a yield stress less than that of the coated current collector part, and wherein when the yield stress of the coated current collector part is a 1 and the yield stress of the uncoated current collector part is 02, the condition of l.5:Sal/a2:S 7 is satisfied. EVIDENCE RELIED ON BY THE EXAMINER Omori et al. Takayuki et al. JP 2000-251942 JP 2004-127799 Sept. 14, 2000 Apr. 22, 2004 D. Tabor, The Hardness and Strength of Metals, 79 J. Institute of Metals 1294 (1951). ANALYSIS The Examiner rejected claims 1-3, 5-7, 15-17, 19, and 20 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as unpatentable over Omori in view ofTakayuki, as evidenced by Tabor.2 The Appellant does not argue the claims separately, 2 In the Final Action, the Examiner relied on Omori in view of Takayuki as evidenced by U.S. Patent No. 6,827,796. Final Act. 3. In the Answer, the 2 Appeal2013-010684 Application 12/010,868 so the claims stand or fall together. 37 C.F.R. § 41.37(c)(l)(iv). We treat claim 1, reproduced above, as representative of the rejected claims. The Examiner found that Omori teaches each element of claim 1 except the specific yield stress ratio of l.5:Sal/a2:S 7. Ans. 3. The Examiner found that Takayuki teaches an electrode current collector with coated and uncoated portions in which the border between the portions is annealed, resulting in a Vicker's hardness of the annealed boundary portion of 30-50 and a Vicker' s hardness of the coated portion of 60-100. Id. The Examiner also found that "Vicker's hardness is directly proportional to yield stress," meaning that "the ratio of yield stress of the coated part to the border part [of Takayuki] would be 1.2-3.33 ... which would significantly overlap the claimed range." Id. at 3--4. The Examiner further found that, similar to the Appellant's claimed invention, Takayuki "teaches the purpose of annealing is to prevent breaking ... and to achieve high capacity and high reliability of the battery." Id. at 4. The Examiner concluded that it would have been obvious "to anneal the border of the non-coated part" of Omori's current collector "to provide the yield stress relationship as taught by Takayuki because this would prevent breaking by charging and discharging, and achieve high capacity and high reliability of the battery." Id. The dispute before us is whether Vicker' s hardness is sufficiently proportional to yield stress such that a person of ordinary skill in the art Examiner stated that, in an Advisory Action dated January 2, 2013, the rejection was modified to rely on Tabor instead of the '796 patent. Ans. 2. The Answer denominated the ground of rejection as a new ground of rejection because it relies on Tabor instead of the '796 patent. Id. The Appellant has elected to maintain the appeal and address Tabor in the Reply Brief rather than to reopen prosecution. See generally Reply Br. 3 Appeal2013-010684 Application 12/010,868 would have understood the current collector of Omori as modified by Takayuki to possess the claimed yield stress ratio. See App. Br. 12-30. In support of the finding that Vicker' s hardness and yield stress are directly proportional for the compositions of Takayuki and Omori, the Examiner relied on Tabor. Ans. 5-6. Tabor teaches that, "[fJor metals which do not work-harden appreciably, the hardness value for ... the Vickers indenter is approximately three times the yield stress." Tabor at 17. The Examiner found that Tabor teaches that copper and aluminum-the metals relevant to Omori's current collector-do not work harden appreciably, and that the "Tabor relationship" (i.e., direct proportionality of Vicker's hardness to yield stress) applies to the metals of the current collector of Omori. Ans. 5- 6. Those findings, along with the resulting finding that the Vicker' s hardness ratio of Takayuki (1.2 to 3.33) would correspond to a yield stress ratio that overlaps with the claimed range of 1.5 to 7, shifted the burden to the Appellant to show otherwise. Cf 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."); In re Best, 562 F.2d 1252, 1255 (CCPA 1977) (similar). In support of the position that a person of ordinary skill would not have understood Vicker' s hardness to be directly proportional to yield stress, the Appellant relies on several secondary references, which we discuss in more detail below. See App. Br. 14-30.3 The Appellant argues, for 3 At the oral hearing, the Appellant raised new arguments that do not appear in the Appellant's briefs. Our consideration of the record on appeal is 4 Appeal2013-010684 Application 12/010,868 example, that direct proportionality may be lacking because ( 1) the metals of Takayuki "may not have reached a limiting fully strain-hardened condition," id. at 15; Reply Br. 7-10; (2) Takayuki's test force is only 2 gf, while a company known as Instron allegedly "warns" that "caution must be used when trying to compare results" when a force less than 200 g is used, App. Br. 16; (3) the "yield strength-hardness correlation" may be nonlinear in the hardness range of the metals used by Takayuki, id. at 17-18; and/or (4) relationships applicable to bulk metals (such as those of Tabor) may not be applicable to the thin foils relevant to electrode current collectors, id. at 18- 20. We are not persuaded by those arguments because they do not adequately address whether a person of ordinary skill in the art would have understood the composition of Omori as modified by Takayuki, having a Vicker's hardness ratio between 1.2 and 3.33, to possess a yield stress ratio between 1.5 and 7, as claimed. In other words, the Appellant's arguments focus on whether Vicker' s hardness and yield stress have a precisely linear relationship. But, as the Examiner explained, "[ e ]ven if the correlation is nonlinear, Applicant is claiming a 150-700% difference in yield strength between the annealed part and the non-annealed part." Advisory Act. dated January 2, 2013; see also Ans. 7. The lower end of the Vicker's hardness ratio range taught by Takayuki is 1.2. Even if a Vicker' s hardness ratio of limited to those arguments timely raised in the Appeal Brief. See 37 C.F.R. § 41.37(c)(l)(iv) ("[A]ny arguments or authorities not included in the appeal brief will be refused consideration by the Board for purposes of the present appeal."); see also 37 C.F.R. § 41.47(e) (providing that new arguments may not be presented at the oral hearing, except under circumstances not alleged to be present here). 5 Appeal2013-010684 Application 12/010,868 1.2 does not equate to a yield stress ratio of precisely 1.2, the yield stress ratio could be nearly six fold the Vicker' s hardness ratio and still fall within the scope of claim 1. Similarly, the upper end of the Vicker' s hardness ratio taught by Takayuki is 3.33. Even if a Vicker's hardness ratio of 3.33 does not equate precisely to a yield stress ratio of 3.33, that value could be more than halved or doubled and still fall within the scope of claim 1. Thus, the critical issue is not whether the relationship between Vicker' s hardness and yield stress is precisely linear. Instead, one critical issue is whether a person of ordinary skill in the art would have understood the Vicker' s hardness ratios taught by Takayuki to correspond to yield stress ratios that overlap the range of claim 1. The broader and ultimate critical issue is whether a person of ordinary skill in the art, even in the absence of such understanding, would have provided Omori with the Vicker' s hardness ratios taught by Takayuki, thereby naturally and necessarily arriving at yield stress ratios within the claimed range (as suggested by the Examiner at Ans. 6). References relied upon by the Examiner and by the Appellant establish a reasonable expectation that, under certain conditions, Vicker' s hardness is directly proportional to yield stress, and, therefore, that a Vicker's hardness ratio would be equal to a yield stress ratio. See, e.g., Tabor at 17; Cahoon4 at Table I & Examiner's plot of data attached to Advisory Action dated January 2, 2013; Pavlina5 at 888 ("Yield strength 4 J.R. Cahoon et al., The Determination of Yield Strength From Hardness Measurements, 2 Metallurgical Transactions 1979, 1980 (1971). 5 E.J. Pavlina, Correlation of Yield Strength and Tensile Strength with Hardness for Steels, 17 J. Materials Eng. & Performance 888, 888, 889 6 Appeal2013-010684 Application 12/010,868 shows a clear linear relationship with the diamond pyramid hardness for the entire strength range."), Fig. la. We have considered the evidence relied upon by the Appellant to show that, under certain conditions, Vicker' s hardness may deviate somewhat from a linear relationship with yield stress. For example, the Appellant argues that the direct proportionality described by Cahoon and Tabor applies only to fully strain-hardened metals, and that the metals of Omori and Takayuki may not be fully strain-hardened. E.g., App. Br. 15, Reply Br. 7. But the Appellant does not attempt to quantify how the strain- hardened vs. non-strain hardened distinction would affect the relationship between Vicker's hardness and yield stress, despite the fact that Tabor appears to include teachings relevant to that issue. E.g., Tabor at 15 ("For materials that work harden ... _[6J By an empirical method it may be shown that, with the pyramid used in the Vickers test, the indentation increases the effective yield stress of the metal by an amount equivalent to a strain of about 8%."). Thus, we are not persuaded that the Appellant's arguments concerning strain or work hardening establish reversible error in the Examiner's rejection. Similarly, the Appellant argues that whether yield strength is directly proportional to Vicker' s hardness depends on the strengthening mechanism, and that the strengthening mechanism for Takayuki is different for the (2008). 6 While Cahoon discusses "strain" -hardened metals and Tabor discusses "work"-hardened metals, the terms appear to be equivalent. See, e.g., Reply Br. 7, 12 (using the terms interchangeably). 7 Appeal2013-010684 Application 12/010,868 different portions of the current collector (i.e., annealed vs. non-annealed). App. Br. 17 (citing Cahoon at 1981 ("[T]he yield strength could not be correlated directly with hardness ... but was dependent on the strengthening mechanism. For a similar hardness, the aged alloys exhibit a consistently lower yield strength and consistently higher strain hardening coefficient than the cold worked alloys.")). Again, however, the Appellant fails to quantify by how much the strengthening mechanism might cause the relationship between Vicker's hardness and yield stress to deviate from linear, despite the fact that Cahoon appears to include teachings relevant to that issue. E.g., Cahoon at 1981 ("The results presented in Tables I and II show that the yield strength varies from about H/6 for an alloy with a high strain hardening coefficient to H/3.4 for an alloy with a low strain hardening coefficient."). Thus, the Appellant's argument fails to establish that the Vicker' s hardness ratios taught by Takayuki do not correspond to yield stress ratios that overlap with the range of claim 1. Relying on Pavlina, the Appellant argues that the relationship between hardness and yield stress deviates from linearity at hardness values below 130 DPH. App. Br. 17 (citing Pavlina at 889). Because Takayuki reports Vicker's hardness values (which, according to the Appellant, are the "same as DPH") in the range of 30-100, the Appellant argues that the linear relationship between hardness and yield stress would not hold for Takayuki. Id. at 18. Pavlina, however, concerns steel rather than aluminum or copper, and the Appellant has not explained to what extent Pavlina' s findings would apply to aluminum or copper. Moreover, the Appellant cites no data in Pavlina obtained at hardness values less than 100, and the Appellant has not quantified the extent to which the hardness-yield stress relationship would 8 Appeal2013-010684 Application 12/010,868 deviate from linearity at such hardness values (if at all with respect to aluminum and copper). The Appellant also argues that the Vicker's hardness data of Takayuki is questionable because Takayuki used only 2 grams of force, while Instron allegedly "warns" that "caution must be used when trying to compare results" when a force less than 200 g is used. See App. Br. 16. However, there is no evidence in the record supporting the Appellant's assertion. The Appellant did not attach a copy of the relevant portion of Instron' s website to its brief, and the provided web address appears to be invalid, resulting in a message of "page not found." Thus, we accord no evidentiary weight to the alleged teaching from Instron. Even if we were to consider that reference, we would not find it persuasive because, according to the Appellant, Instron merely "warns" that caution must be used with smaller forces; not that results obtained using smaller forces necessarily are invalid. See id. The Appellant relies on a series of references to show that the mechanical properties of bulk metals do not necessarily apply to micrometer-scale metal foils. See App. Br. 19-29. For instance, the Appellant notes that a reference describing a study done on cracking in thin copper foils concluded that "models and conclusions appropriate for bulk materials may not be applicable when analyzing foil materials." App. Br. 20-21 (emphasis omitted). However, the Appellant does not adequately explain how that affects the relationship between hardness and yield stress of foils. Even if bulk copper were, for example, to crack under different conditions than copper foil, that fact would fail to establish that the Vicker's hardness of copper foil is not proportional to the yield stress of copper foil. 9 Appeal2013-010684 Application 12/010,868 Similarly, the Appellant contends that hardness may not vary with film thickness, but yield stress does. Id. at 28. The Appellant concludes that "a strong and/or predictable relationship between yield strength and hardness for aluminum in the vicinity of a 15 µm film thickness cannot be inferred." Id. at 28. Based on the Appellant's evidence, it may be true, for example, that the yield stress of a thick foil or bulk metal should not be used to predict the hardness of a thin foil. But the Appellant does not adequately explain why that would necessarily mean that yield stress of a thin foil cannot be used to predict the hardness of a foil of the same thickness. Additionally, and as the Examiner explained, because the thickness of the two portions (annealed and non-annealed) of Takayuki's current collector is approximately the same, any complications due to foil thickness would be expected to approximately cancel out. E.g., Advisory Action dated January 29, 2013, ii 2. While the Appellant suggests that the thickness of the two portions may not be the same, App. Br. 24, the Appellant identifies nothing in Takayuki for support, and the portions of Takayuki that identify charge collector thickness do not appear to suggest that the annealed and non-annealed portions of the current collector have different thickness. E.g., Takayuki ii 29. Similarly, the Appellant contests the Examiner's finding that complications due to thickness would cancel out even if both portions of the current collector are the same thickness. App. Br. 25. However, even if "thickness/grain diameter" do not precisely cancel out, see id., the Appellant has not established that the impact would be so large as to remove the yield stress ratio of Omori as modified by Takayuki from the scope of claim 1. While it does not appear that the references establishing the relationship between hardness and yield stress used foils, they likewise do 10 Appeal2013-010684 Application 12/010,868 not appear to establish or suggest that the same (or a similar) relationship would not apply to foils. In general, the arguments presented by the Appellant appear to rely largely on speculation that the Tabor relationship may not directly apply to the materials of Omori and Takayuki, e.g., App. Br. 15 ("yield stresses ... will not necessarily be the same as the ratio of their Vicker's hardnesses," "stress condition ... may not have reached a limiting fully strain-hardened condition," (emphasis added)), 17 ("strain hardening coefficient could vary ... " (emphasis added)), but, as explained above, the Appellant fails to quantify any expected deviation in order to establish that the current collector of Omori as modified by Takayuki would not fall within the scope of claim 1. As explained above, the Examiner found that the Vicker' s hardness ratio range disclosed by the prior art would correspond to a yield stress ratio range that overlaps the claimed range even if the relationship between Vicker' s hardness and yield stress is not precisely linear. See Advisory Act. dated January 2, 2013 ("Even if the correlation is nonlinear, Applicant is claiming a 150-700% difference in yield strength between the annealed part and the non-annealed part."). The Appellant's only response to that finding is that the relationship may not be precisely linear "for metal foils with thicknesses in the micron range." App. Br. 22. Because the Appellant has not attempted to quantify any expected deviation, this record presents no basis to reject the Examiner's finding that the Vicker's hardness ratio range disclosed by the prior art would correspond to a yield stress ratio range that overlaps the claimed range even if the relationship is not precisely linear. For the reasons set forth above, a preponderance of the evidence supports the Examiner's finding that, for the compositions of Omori and 11 Appeal2013-010684 Application 12/010,868 Takayuki, Vicker's hardness is sufficiently proportional to yield stress that a Vicker's hardness ratio of 1.2 to 3.33 equates to a yield stress ratio that at least partially overlaps the claimed range of 1. 5 to 7. Therefore, we agree with the Examiner that a current collector as defined by claim 1 would have been obvious in light of Omori and Takayuki. See In re Peterson, 315 F .3d 1325, 1329 (Fed. Cir. 2003) ("A prima facie case of obviousness typically exists when the ranges of a claimed composition overlap the ranges disclosed in the prior art."); cf In re Spada, 911 F.2d 705, 708 (Fed. Cir. 1990); In re Best, 562 F.2d 1252, 1255 (CCPA 1977). CONCLUSION We AFFIRM the Examiner's rejection of claims 1-3, 5-7, 15-1 7, 19, and 20. No time period for taking any subsequent action in connection with this appeal may be extended under 37 C.F.R. § l.136(a). AFFIRMED 12 Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation