Ex Parte Lawrence et alDownload PDFBoard of Patent Appeals and InterferencesJul 16, 201210887634 (B.P.A.I. Jul. 16, 2012) Copy Citation UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE 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 APPLICATION NO. FILING DATE FIRST NAMED INVENTOR ATTORNEY DOCKET NO. CONFIRMATION NO. 10/887,634 07/09/2004 Wayne Lee Lawrence 128892 3599 7590 07/17/2012 Steven J. Rosen Patent Attorney 4729 Cornell Rd. Cincinnati, OH 45241 EXAMINER HEINRICH, SAMUEL M ART UNIT PAPER NUMBER 3742 MAIL DATE DELIVERY MODE 07/17/2012 PAPER 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. PTOL-90A (Rev. 04/07) UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE ____________________ BEFORE THE BOARD OF PATENT APPEALS AND INTERFERENCES ____________________ Ex parte WAYNE LEE LAWRENCE, PAUL MICHAEL PEROZEK, and MARK SAMUEL BAILEY ____________________ Appeal 2010-007624 Application 10/887,634 Technology Center 3700 ____________________ Before: JENNIFER D. BAHR, WILLIAM V. SAINDON, and MICHAEL J. FITZPATRICK, Administrative Patent Judges. FITZPATRICK, Administrative Patent Judge. DECISION ON APPEAL Appeal 2010-007624 Application 10/887,634 2 STATEMENT OF THE CASE Wayne Lee Lawrence, Paul Michael Perozek, and Mark Samuel Bailey (Appellants) appeal under 35 U.S.C. § 134(a) from a decision finally rejecting claims 1-32. We have jurisdiction under 35 U.S.C. § 6(b). The Claimed Subject Matter According to Appellants, the claimed invention “relates to laser shock peening and, more particularly, to apparatus and methods for synchronization of laser firing and motion systems during laser shock peening.” Spec. 1. Claim 1, reproduced below, is illustrative of the claimed subject matter. 1. A continuous motion laser shock peening apparatus comprising: a laser unit for generating a laser beam for laser shock peening a workpiece, a motion controller controllably connected to a manipulator for continuously moving and positioning the workpiece, a laser controller for modulating and firing the laser beam from the laser unit, a laser firing system for firing the laser beam from the laser unit, and the motion controller operably connected to the laser controller to fire the laser beam based on axis position feedback from a speed control of the motion controller. Appeal 2010-007624 Application 10/887,634 3 Evidence The Examiner relies upon the following prior art references: Moyroud US 4,482,225 Nov. 13, 1984 Suttie US 4,952,789 Aug. 28 1990 Forsyth US 4,969,169 Nov. 6, 1990 Salter US 4,980,718 Dec. 25, 1990 Mannava US 5,674,328 Oct. 7, 1997 Staver US 5,987,042 Nov. 16, 1999 Dulaney US 6,144,012 Nov. 7, 2000 Levin US 6,144,007 Nov. 7, 2000 Akiha US 6,305,985 Oct. 23, 2001 Yoda US 6,539,035 Mar. 25, 2003 Rejections The Examiner makes the following rejections under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a): I. Claims 1-32 as unpatentable over Mannava, Salter, and Levin. II. Claims 2, 19, and 24 as unpatentable over Mannava, Salter, and Levin as applied to claim1, 18, and 23, and further in view of Yoda. III. Claims 3-5, 17, 20-22, 25-28, and 32 as unpatentable over Mannava, Salter, Levin, and Yoda as applied to claims 2, 19, and 24, and further in view of Suttie. IV. Claims 6-8 as unpatentable over Mannava, Salter, Levin, Yoda, and Suttie as applied to claim 3, and further in view of Moyroud. V. Claim 9 as unpatentable over Mannava, Salter, Levin, and Yoda as applied to claim 2, and further in view of Akiha. VI. Claims 10-12 as unpatentable over Mannava, Salter, Levin, Yoda, and Akiha as applied to claim 9, and further in view of Suttie. Appeal 2010-007624 Application 10/887,634 4 VII. Claim 13 as unpatentable over Mannava, Salter, Levin, and Yoda as applied to claim 2, and further in view of Applicant’s Admitted Prior Art (“AAPA”) or Forsyth. VIII. Claims 14-16 as unpatentable over Mannava, Salter, Levin, Yoda, and AAPA or Forsyth as applied to claim 13 above, and further in view of Suttie. IX. Claims 17, 21, and 26 as unpatentable over Mannava, Salter, Levin, Yoda, and Suttie as applied to claims 3, 20, and 25, and further in view of Staver. X. Claims 27 and 29-31 as unpatentable over Mannava, Salter, Levin, Yoda, and Suttie as applied to claim 25, and further in view of Dulaney. XI. Claim 32 as unpatentable over Mannava, Salter, Levin, Yoda, and Suttie as applied to claim 25, and further in view of Dulaney as applied to claim 31, and further in view of Staver. We REVERSE. Claims 1-32 The appealed claims include three independent claims: 1, 18, and 23. Independent claim 1, which is directed to a continuous motion laser shock peening (LSP) apparatus, requires, in relevant part, “the motion controller operably connected to the laser controller to fire the laser beam based on axis position feedback from a speed control of the motion controller.” Similarly, independent claims 18 and 23, which are directed to continuous motion LSP methods, require in relevant part, “firing the laser beam pulses Appeal 2010-007624 Application 10/887,634 5 based on axis position feedback from a speed control of the motion controller.” The Examiner rejected claims 1-32 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as being unpatentable over Mannava, Salter, and Levin. Ans. 4. More specifically, the rejection states: Mannava et al describe (col. 6, lines 5-15 and lines 41- 51) modulating and firing the laser beam and continuously moving the blade while continuously firing the laser. Salter et al describe (column 6, lines 59-66) "Position feedback from an x-axis sensor 37 of the wafer stage 25 is also monitored on a line 38 and .... control of a laser trigger 40 by the x-align error signal on line 39 is enabled, thereby firing an excimer laser source 41". Levin describes (column 4, line 37 through column 5, line 10) "pulse controller 16 thus either speeds up or delays the time interval between pulses to accurately place the perforations or holes 12 in the object 7" and (last paragraph beginning in column 4 through column 5, line 10) "position feedback sensor 14, in addition to receiving signals relating to the object movement 6 and the laser head movement 8, also receives a firing signal 11 from the laser firing control 50" and "After passing through position feedback sensor 14, the firing signal 11 is passed through the pulse controller 16 where the timing of the next firing of the laser 5 can be altered, if need be. This is particularly advantageous as the feedback control mechanism makes immediate adjustments on a pulse by pulse basis not only for variations in the object movement 6 or laser head movement 8, but also for variations in the timing of the laser pulses." Laser shock peening with continuous moving and positioning and with feedback from a motion control feature would have been obvious at the time applicant’s invention was made to a person having ordinary skill in the art because Appeal 2010-007624 Application 10/887,634 6 automatic positioning control is old and well known in the laser machining art and because the continuous motion provides quicker processing. Ans. 4-5; Final Rej. 2-3. Appellants argue that the prior art does not disclose, teach, or suggest “the motion controller operably connected to the laser controller to fire the laser beam based on axis position feedback from a speed control of the motion controller” as recited in claim 1. Appellants concede that Salter and Levin disclose position feedback sensors but argue that they are “not part of the motion controller and [are] not part of a speed control of the motion controller.” App. Br. 20 (discussing the position feedback sensor of Salter); see also App. Br. 21 (“The same arguments apply to Levin. … The position feedback sensors 14 and 24 are not part of the motion controller and not part of a speed control of the motion controller”). We agree with Appellants that the Examiner’s rejection does not identify how the cited reference(s) allegedly disclose, teach, or suggest this limitation. The Examiner has the initial burden to set forth the basis for any rejection so as to put the patent applicant on notice of the reasons why the applicant is not entitled to a patent on the claim scope that he seeks – the so called “prima facie case.” In re Oetiker, 977 F.2d 1443, 1445 (Fed. Cir.1992); In re Piasecki, 745 F.2d 1468, 1472 (Fed. Cir. 1984) (the initial burden of proof is on the USPTO “to produce the factual basis for its rejection of an application under sections 102 and 103”) (quoting In re Warner, 379 F.2d 1011, 1016 (CCPA 1967)). Appeal 2010-007624 Application 10/887,634 7 In his Response to Argument, the Examiner acknowledges Appellants’ argument but still does not identify how the cited reference(s) allegedly disclose, teach, or suggest the limitation at issue. Instead, the Examiner interprets the limitation as purely functional,1 stating: In response to applicant’s argument that neither Salter et al or Levin disclose motion control to fire a laser beam based on axis position feedback from a speed control of the motion controller, a recitation of the intended use of the claimed invention must result in a structural difference between the claimed invention and the prior art in order to patentably distinguish the claimed invention from the prior art. If the prior art structure is capable of performing the intended use, then it meets the claim. Ans. 10. The Examiner then cites to portions of Salter (column 6, line 37 through column 7, line22) and Levin (column 5, lines 6-10) to show that the prior art structure is allegedly capable of performing what the Examiner has interpreted as an intended use (i.e., “fir[ing] the laser beam based on axis position feedback from a speed control of the motion controller”). Ans. 10. Yet, the Examiner has still failed to explain, and the portions of Salter and Levin cited by the Examiner do not appear to address, how the prior art of record may be capable of “fir[ing] the laser beam based on axis position feedback from a speed control of the motion controller,” as recited in claim 1. Indeed, the Final Rejection and Examiner’s Answer do not even mention a “speed control.” Accordingly, we cannot sustain the rejection of claims 1- 1 Not all of the appealed claims are apparatus claims. Claims 18-32 are method claims. Thus, the Examiner’s response does not address claims 18- 32, each of which requires the actual step of “firing the laser beam pulses based on axis position feedback from a speed control of the motion controller.” Appeal 2010-007624 Application 10/887,634 8 32 as being unpatentable over Mannava, Salter, and Levin for failure to present a prima facie case of unpatentability. The Examiner’s rejections of various subsets of claims 1-32 over Mannava, Salter, Levin and one or more additional references fail to cure the underlying deficiency discussed above. Accordingly, we do not sustain any of the Examiner’s rejections. DECISION The Examiner’s decision to reject claims 1-32 is REVERSED. REVERSED Klh Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation