Ex Parte 6797454 et alDownload PDFPatent Trial and Appeal BoardNov 20, 201495001962 (P.T.A.B. Nov. 20, 2014) Copy Citation UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARKOFFICE 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. 95/001,962 04/11/2012 6797454 2156-Reexam 9 4011 24998 7590 11/21/2014 DICKSTEIN SHAPIRO LLP 1825 EYE STREET NW Washington, DC 20006-5403 EXAMINER DIAMOND, ALAN D ART UNIT PAPER NUMBER 3991 MAIL DATE DELIVERY MODE 11/21/2014 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 PATENT TRIAL AND APPEAL BOARD ____________ MACDERMID PRINTING SOLUTIONS LLC Requester and Appellant v. E.I. DUPONT de NEMOURS & CO. Patent Owner and Respondent ____________ Appeal 2014-001756 Reexamination Control 95/001,962 Patent 6,797,454 B1 Technology Center 3900 ____________ Before MARK NAGUMO, RICHARD M. LEBOVITZ, and RAE LYNN P. GUEST, Administrative Patent Judges. GUEST, Administrative Patent Judge. DECISION ON APPEAL This is a decision on an appeal by the Third-Party Requester from the Patent Examiner’s decision not to adopt proposed rejections of the claims in an inter partes reexamination of U.S. Patent 6,797,454 B1. The Board’s jurisdiction for this appeal is under 35 U.S.C. §§ 6(b), 134, and 315. We AFFIRM. I. BACKGROUND The patent in dispute in this appeal is U.S. Patent 6,797,454 B1 (hereinafter, “the ’454 patent”), which issued September 28, 2004 to Melvin Appeal 2014-001756 Reexamination Control 95/001,962 Patent 6,797,454 B1 2 Harry Johnson, et al. A request for inter partes reexamination under 35 U.S.C. §§ 311-318 and 37 C.F.R. §§ 1.902-1.997 for the ’454 patent was filed April 11, 2012 by Requester and Appellant, MacDermid Printing Solutions LLC (hereinafter “Requester”). Request for Inter Partes Reexamination 1; Requester Appeal Brief 1, dated August 23, 2013 (hereinafter “Req. App. Br.”). The Patent Owner is the E.I. DuPont de Nemours & Co. Patent Owner Respondent Brief 1, dated September 20, 2013 (hereinafter “PO Res. Br.”). The ’454 patent is the subject of a civil action in U.S. District Court for the District of New Jersey styled E.I. DuPont De Nemours & Co. v. MacDermid Printing Solutions LLC, 3:10-cv-03409 (MLC), which is currently stayed pending the outcome of the present reexamination proceeding. Originally patented claims 1, 7-14, and 17-22 have been cancelled. Claims 2-6, 15, and 16 have been confirmed by the Examiner, which is being appealed by the Requester. An oral hearing was held June 4, 2014, and a transcript of the hearing was entered into the record on August 1, 2014. The invention described in the ’454 patent is directed to a method and apparatus for processing a relief pattern on a flexographic plate by taking advantage of the melting point difference between irradiated and unirradiated areas of a composition layer comprising a photoinitiator. The method includes thermodeveloping a photosensitive element comprising the composition layer supported by a flexible substrate. The photosensitive element is developed by heating the composition layer above the melting Appeal 2014-001756 Reexamination Control 95/001,962 Patent 6,797,454 B1 3 point of the unirradiated area, but below the melting point of the irradiated area and pressing a heated absorbent layer against the melted portion in order to remove some of the composition layer in the unirradiated area to form a relief pattern. See Abstract, col. 1, ll. 9-15, col. 3, l. 48-col. 4, l. 36, and col. 5, ll. 26-38. The apparatus is defined by various devices and means to accomplish the steps of the process. Requester appeals the Examiner’s decision not to maintain 35 separate proposed rejections under 35 U.S.C. § 103. Each proposed rejection includes a similar reliance on some combination of Bhateja,1 Martens,2 or both, in view of either Leavitt3 or Scott.4 Examiner’s Right of Appeal Notice 7-12, mailed June 7, 2013 (hereinafter “RAN”).5 In the interest of brevity, we will not list each of the individual rejections. II. THE CLAIMS Claims 2 and 156 are representative of the claims on appeal and read as follows (with reference numerals added in brackets corresponding to exemplary elements shown in the drawings of the ’454 patent) (emphasis added): 1 Bhateja et al., WO 96/144603, published May 17, 1996. 2 Martens, et al., WO 98/13730, published April 2, 1998. 3 Minard A. Leavitt, US 3,850,635, issued November 26, 1974. 4 Richard D. Scott, US 4,198,145, issued April 15, 1980. 5 Requester identifies 39 separate proposed rejections because the Examiner combines Requester’s Rejections 9 and 19, Rejections 10 and 20, Rejections 17 and 27, and Rejections 18 and 28 in Examiner’s Rejections IX, X, XVII, and XVIII, respectively. See RAN 8-10; Req. App. Br. 5-8. 6 Claims 2 and 15 were amended during reexamination by cancelling independent claims 1 and 14 and incorporating the language of claims 1 and 14 into claims 2 and 15, respectively. Accordingly, claims 2 and 15 contain no new limitations over claims 2 and 15 from the original patent. Appeal 2014-001756 Reexamination Control 95/001,962 Patent 6,797,454 B1 4 2. An apparatus for forming a relief pattern from a photosensitive element [11 (see Fig. 1); 16 (Fig. 15)] comprising a flexible substrate [15 (Fig. 1)] having an exterior surface and an interior surface, and a composition layer [17 (Fig. 1)]] on the substrate capable of being partially liquefied, the composition layer having an exterior surface and an interior surface, with the composition layer and flexible substrate joined at their respective interior surfaces, comprising: a roller [78 (shown in detail in Fig. 16)]] mounted for rotation in a first frame portion for supplying an absorbent material [76] to the exterior surface of the composition layer; a drum [18] mounted for rotation in a second frame portion with means for supporting the photosensitive element on an outer circumferential surface of the drum with the exterior surface of the flexible substrate contacting said outer surface, the drum positioned for delivering the photosensitive element to the absorbent material, wherein at least one of the first and second frame portions are movable relative to the other; first heating means [300] for applying heat to the exterior surface of the composition layer on the drum adjacent where the absorbent material contacts the layer at the roller, the first heating means adapted to heat the exterior surface of the layer to a temperature T1 which is equal to or greater than a temperature T2 sufficient to cause a portion of the layer to liquefy, while maintaining the exterior surface of the flexible substrate at a temperature T3 at least 20°F below temperature T1; second heating means for heating the roller to a temperature capable of heating the exterior surface of the composition layer to a temperature T4 which is equal to or greater than temperature T2 while the absorbent material is contacting the exterior surface of the layer and while maintaining the exterior surface of the flexible substrate at the temperature T3 which is at least 20°F below temperature T4; pressure means [arms 312/314] for causing the photosensitive element and the absorbent material to come into contact between the drum and the roller at a pressure sufficient Appeal 2014-001756 Reexamination Control 95/001,962 Patent 6,797,454 B1 5 for at least a portion of the liquefied material of the composition layer to be absorbed by the absorbent material; separation means [idler roller 313] for separating the photosensitive element from the absorbent material; and forced cooling means [blower 356 and optional shroud 358 (Fig. 15) or drum arrangement (Fig. 19)] for cooling the photosensitive element. 15. A method for forming a relief pattern from a photosensitive element comprising a flexible substrate having an exterior surface and an interior surface, and a composition layer on the substrate capable of being partially liquefied, the composition layer having an exterior surface and an interior surface, with the composition layer and flexible substrate joined at their respective interior surfaces, comprising: supplying an absorbent material to the exterior surface of the composition layer with a roller operating at a temperature Tr that heats the absorbent material; delivering the photosensitive element to the absorbent material with a rotating drum and supporting the element with the exterior surface of the flexible substrate in contact with an outer circumferential surface of the drum, wherein each rotation of the drum defines a cycle; heating the exterior surface of the composition layer sufficient to cause a portion of the layer to liquefy with a heater operating at a temperature Th; pressing the photosensitive element and the heated absorbent material into contact between the drum operating at a rotation speed, S, and the roller at a pressure, P, sufficient for the heated absorbent material to liquefy at least a portion of the exterior surface of the composition layer and to absorb the liquefied material; separating the photosensitive element from the absorbent material; repeating the supplying, delivering, heating, pressing, and separating steps for a predetermined number of cycles; changing at least one of the process parameters selected from the group consisting of temperature of the roller Tr, Appeal 2014-001756 Reexamination Control 95/001,962 Patent 6,797,454 B1 6 temperature of the heater Th, pressure P, and rotation speed S, during at least one of the supplying, delivering, heating, and pressing steps for at least one of the predetermined number of cycles; and forcefully cooling the photosensitive element after separating the element from the absorbent material, by a cooling means having a temperature Tc wherein the repeating step includes the cooling step and the changing step includes the temperature Tc of the cooling means as one of the process parameters in the group. According to the ’454 patent, the problem of thermal distortion of the flexible substrate of the photosensitive element may be met by establishing a temperature differential of at least 20° between the exterior surface of the composition layer and the temperature of the substrate. See ’454 patent, Abstract, col. 3, ll. 48-54, col. 4, ll. 12-28, col. 21, l. 57 to col. 22, l. 3, col. 22, ll. 23-42, col. 26, ll. 39-46. The ’454 patent discloses a second embodiment which further includes a forced cooling means. See id., col., 4, ll. 37-39, col. 23, l. 55 to col. 24, l. 42. At issue in this appeal is the feature of claim 2 of “forced cooling means for cooling the photosensitive element” and the step in claim 15 of “forcefully cooling the photosensitive element after separating the [photosensitive] element from the absorbent material, by a cooling means.” Figure 15 of the ’454 patent is reproduced below and illustrates one embodiment of a forced cooling means recited in claim 2 comprising a blower 356 and optional shroud 358 “to extend from the blower in a direction around the drum 18 in close proximity to the surface 22 of the drum.” ’454 patent, col. 23, ll. 35-39. Appeal 2014-001756 Reexamination Control 95/001,962 Patent 6,797,454 B1 7 Figure 15 depicts a side cross-sectional view partially in schematic of the second embodiment of the ’454 patent. ’454 patent, col. 5, ll. 1-2. Blower 356 and optional shroud 358 depicted in the drawing is described as a “cooling means.” The ’454 patent further describes that the cooling means may alternatively be “to circulate a cooling fluid beneath the drum support surface 22 to cool the flexible substrate 15 by direct contact” or “forceably circulating cooling gases, such as air, through the interior of the drum structure 18 of the first or second embodiments” as illustrated in Figure 19, which is reproduced below. Id. col. 23, l. 67-col. 24, l. 3 and col. 24, ll. 10- 13 (emphasis added). Appeal 2014-001756 Reexamination Control 95/001,962 Patent 6,797,454 B1 8 Figure 19 depicts a side cross-sectional view partially in schematic of an alternative cooling embodiment for the drum. Id. col. 5, ll. 20-21. The “cooling means” comprises electrically powered fans 434 which force air [arrows 444] from axial ends 426 [left, not labeled] and 428 [right], into plenum 420. The impingement of air in plenum 420 directly on the inner surface 424 of the drum 18 increases the heat transfer from the surface 424. Heated air exits at the axial ends 426 and 428, following arrows 440. Id. at col. 24, ll. 10-43. The ’454 patent states that cooling drum is an alternative to a drum that employs a heater 21 to stabilize the temperature of the drum and substrate. Id., col. 24, ll. 5-9. III. APPEAL BY REQUESTER Requester’s proposed obviousness rejections each rely on Bhateja and/or Martens for teaching the basic structure of the claimed apparatus and Appeal 2014-001756 Reexamination Control 95/001,962 Patent 6,797,454 B1 9 method. Bhateja recognizes a problem in the art of thermal distortion of the flexographic printing plates (corresponding to the claimed “photosensitive element”) during development. Bhateja, p. 2, ll. 16-21. Bhateja solves this problem by annealing the polymeric substrate before development. Bhateja, p. 3, l. 30 to p. 5, l. 6. This procedure was adopted by Martens. Martens, p. 5, ll. 17-20. Neither Bhateja nor Martens expressly teaches a forced cooling means, as recited in claim 2, or a step of “forcefully cooling the photosensitive element after separating the element from the absorbent material, by a cooling means” as recited in claim 15. Requester contends that the teaching in Bhateja and Martens of thermal distortion in a flexible substrate would have suggested cooling the photosensitive element to the skilled artisan. Req. App. Br. 9 and 18-21. Alternatively, Requester contends that forced cooling of a photosensitive element in the apparatus and method described in Bhateja and Martens would have been obvious to the skilled artisan based on the teaching of force cooling a substrate-backed photosensitive film in either Scott or Leavitt. Req. App. Br. 13-18. The Examiner does not adopt the rejections because Bhateja and Martens are silent with respect to forced cooling in combination with either a temperature differential (claim 2) or in combination with changing processing parameters (claim 15) for addressing the problem of thermal distortion. RAN 20-21. The Examiner also finds that Scott and Leavitt do not solve the deficiencies of Bhateja and Martins. Id. at 15. The Examiner determines that the teachings of Scott are incompatible with the process of Bhateja and Martens in that Scott avoids contact between its heaters/blowers Appeal 2014-001756 Reexamination Control 95/001,962 Patent 6,797,454 B1 10 and the photographic film being processed. Id. at 16 and 22-29. The Examiner further determines that the teachings of Leavitt are incompatible with the process of Bhateja and Martens in that the film in Leavitt is not supported directly by the drum, but rather is supported by air that escapes from the passages in the microporous material that make up the cooled drum 34. Id. at 18-19 and 29-34. The issue on appeal is: Did the Examiner err in determining that using a forced cooling means in the apparatus and method of Bhateja and Martens would not have been obvious to one of ordinary skill in the art at the time of the invention based on the teaching in Bhateja of thermal distortion and the teaching of a forced cooling means described in Scott and/or Leavitt? We answer this question in the negative and determine that the Examiner did not err in not adopting the proposed rejection by Requester. Discussion Bhateja and/or Martens Requester contends that “forced cooling” of the photosensitive element would have been obvious to the skilled artisan based on the teachings in Bhateja and incorporated in Martens of thermal distortion of the photographic element. Req. App. Br. 18-21. Requester argues that Bhateja teaches overheating of the substrate as the cause of thermal distortion. Id. at 18. According to the Requester, “[i]t is simply common sense to cool the substrate if one knows that the substrate is being overheated during thermal development leading to thermal distortion.” Id. Appeal 2014-001756 Reexamination Control 95/001,962 Patent 6,797,454 B1 11 Requester further contends that the terms “forced cooling means” and “forcefully cooling . . . by a cooling means” in the claims means “actively removes heat in order to cool the photosensitive element.” Id. at 19 (quoting RAN 6-7). According to Requester, Bhateja and Martens inherently meet this limitation by heating the drum to a maintenance temperature below that of the developer roll to maintain a temperature gradient between the substrate film and the photopolymer surface of the flexographic plate (photosensitive element) which is squeezed between the drum and the roll. Id. at 20. We agree with the Examiner that forced cooling would not have been either inherent or obvious based on the teachings of Bhateja and Martens. RAN 14-15 and 20-21. Contrary to Requester’s proposed interpretation (Req. App. Br. 19), a differential between a heated drum and hot roller/developer roll cannot reasonably be encompassed under the phrases “forced cooling means” or “forcefully cooling . . . by a cooling means,” as the skilled artisan would have understood these phrases in light of the ’454 patent. Since each of claims 2 and 15 refer to a “cooling means,” the recited limitations are presumptively means-plus function limitations, and thus it is necessary to look to the specification to identify the corresponding structure (and equivalents thereof) for performing the recited function. In re Donaldson Co., 16 F.3d 1189, 1195 (Fed. Cir. 1994) (en banc); Chicago Board Options Exchange Inc. v. International Securities Exchange LLC, 677 F.3d. 1361, 1367 (Fed. Cir. 2012). The ’454 patent describes two structures it considers “cooling means” each involving the application of a cooling Appeal 2014-001756 Reexamination Control 95/001,962 Patent 6,797,454 B1 12 element, namely an external blower or an internal coolant axially passed through the drum. ’454 patent, col. 23, l. 55 to col. col. 24, l. 42; FIG. 15. Therefore, the term “forced cooling means” is disclosed as a device that forces a coolant fluid (e.g., air or a cooling liquid) over the substrate (blower 356 and optional shroud 358 in Fig. 15) or under the surface of the drum supporting the substrate (fans 434 in Fig. 19, or the alternative cooling system described at column 24, lines 1-3). Requester has not provided persuasive evidence to support a finding that the temperature differential described in Bhateja and/or Martens is an equivalent structure, achieving substantially the same function in substantially the same way by an art- recognized equivalent structure. To the contrary, the ’454 patent distinguishes a temperature differential between two heated surfaces from a means for “forced cooling.” The means for “forced cooling” is described only in the second embodiment of the ’454 patent and in addition to providing the 20 degree temperature differential of the first embodiment, which does not include a “forced cooling” means. ’454 patent, col. 21, l. 43 to col. 22, l. 43. Accordingly, Requester’s argument that Bhateja and/or Martens teach either expressly or inherently a forced cooling means or a step of forcefully cooling by a cooling means is based on an unreasonable interpretation of the claim. Whether a claimed invention would have been obvious is a question of law, based on factual determinations regarding the scope and content of the prior art, differences between the prior art and the claims at issue, the level of ordinary skill in the pertinent art, and any objective indicia of non- obviousness. KSR Int'l Co. v. Teleflex Inc., 550 U.S. 398, 406 Appeal 2014-001756 Reexamination Control 95/001,962 Patent 6,797,454 B1 13 (2007); Graham v. John Deere Co. of Kansas City, 383 U.S. 1, 17–18 (1966). While we agree with the Requester that Bhateja and Martens recognize that a problem to be solved is the thermal distortion of the substrate, we are not persuaded that the skilled artisan would have solved the problem of the thermal distortion by forcefully cooling the substrate as taught by the ’454 patent. Bhateja and Martens teach two ways to alleviate the problem of thermal distortion of the substrate, namely annealing the substrate in advance, and providing a temperature differential between a heated drum and a heated development roll. Bhateja, p. 3, l. 30 to p. 5, l. 6; p. 2, l. 28 to p. 3, l. 2; Martens, p. 5, ll. 15-25; p. 15, ll. 12-17; p. 23, ll. 17- 26. Requester has not provided persuasive evidence to support a conclusion that a skilled artisan having Bhateja and/or Martens would have added a forced cooling means without the hindsight provided by the ’454 patent. In KSR Int'l Co. v. Teleflex Inc., the Supreme Court set aside any “rigid” application of the teaching, suggestion, motivation (“TSM”) test and determined that the teaching may alternatively be implicit from the prior art as a whole. 550 U.S. 398, 421 (2007). Nonetheless, it is the burden of the moving party, here, the Requestor, to establish based on the evidence of record what was common sense or common knowledge to the skilled artisan. Randall Mfg. v. Rea, 733 F.3d 1355, 1362–63 (Fed. Cir. 2013) (“In recognizing the role of common knowledge and common sense, we have emphasized the importance of a factual foundation to support a party’s claim about what one of ordinary skill in the relevant art would have known.”). Appeal 2014-001756 Reexamination Control 95/001,962 Patent 6,797,454 B1 14 The Requester relies on the Declaration of Dr. Vest to show that it is reasonable for the skilled artisan to look to alternatives to annealing as a solution to the thermal distortion problem described in Bhateja and Martens. App. Br. 11-13; see Vest Decl. ¶¶ 10-17. Further, Drs. Cusdin, Gotsick, and Vest provide unsupported opinion testimony that active cooling would have been obvious. App. Br. 17; see Cusdin Decl. ¶¶ 62-63; Gotsick Decl. ¶ 48- 49; Vest Decl. ¶ 26. Dr. Vest in his declaration provided sufficient reasons why a skilled artisan would have sought a different solution to the problem described in Bhateja. However, there is insufficient evidence to find that forced cooling would have been an obvious solution from a mere disclosure that the distortion problem was caused by heating. We decline to accept a conclusory assertion that to do so would have been “common sense” to the skilled artisan without supporting evidence. In particular, the development processes in Bhateja and Martens rely on controlled heating of the photosensitive element substrate as a required feature. See Bhateja, p. 11, l. 9-11 (transport drum is maintained at 65°C); Martens, p. 16, l. 12-15 (element carrying substrate maintained at 60°C). Peterson, U.S. Patent No. 5,279,697, is incorporated by reference into the teachings of Bhateja (see Bhateja, p. 1, l. 30-p.2, l. 4) and is discussed in the ’454 patent. The Examiner found that Peterson disclosed that the drum that supports the substrate is a preheating drum that is heated with an electrically heated blanket mounted on an inner surface of a main wall of the drum. The heat must travel through the wall of the drum and through the flexible substrate to preheat the composition layer to a temperature near the melt point of the unirradiated area. Appeal 2014-001756 Reexamination Control 95/001,962 Patent 6,797,454 B1 15 RAN 12-13 (quoting the ’454 patent, col. 2, ll. 34-39) (emphasis added). Because the process that is used by Bhateja and Martens relies on preheating of the drum that supports the substrate, the evidence of record is insufficient to establish that the skilled artisan would have altered the controlled heating of the substrate and instead employ forced cooling of the substrate. Accordingly, we agree with the Examiner that claim 1 and claim 15, and the claims that depend therefrom, are not obvious over the teachings of Bhateja and/or Martens. Bhateja and/or Martens and Scott or Leavitt The Requester argues that Scott and Leavitt are analogous art to the flexographic plates of Bhateja and Martens. App. Br. 15-17. While Scott and Leavitt are directed to thermal development of a photographic image, rather than a recessed flexographic plate as taught by Bhateja and Martens, the photographic image is thermally developed on a substantially identical substrate. App. Br. 15. The substrate of Scott and Leavitt, like the substrate of Bhateja and Martens, suffers from thermal distortion during the development process. Id. Scott solves this problem by supporting the film substrate on a cool gas bearing as depicted in Figure 4 reproduced below. See Scott, col. 2, ll. 5-31. Appeal 2014-001756 Reexamination Control 95/001,962 Patent 6,797,454 B1 16 Figure 4 depicts a schematic view of the profile of a thermal gradient across the base of a photographic film emulsion 18. Scott, col. 2, ll. 45-46. “Blower 46 may be arranged to counteract the air flow from preheater 42 as well as the flow from heater 22 such that film 14 can be substantially evenly suspended and supported by a gas bearing.” Leavitt solves the thermal distortion problem in two ways. The first solution is cumulative of the method described in Scott, namely spacing the substrate between cool and hot air supplies, which may form a gas supporting cushion, as depicted in Figure 1 reproduced below. See Leavitt, col. 2, ll. 18-30. Appeal 2014-001756 Reexamination Control 95/001,962 Patent 6,797,454 B1 17 Figure 1 of Leavitt depicts a schematic, partially block diagram of heat developing apparatus incorporating a decreasing temperature gradient is established between first and second surfaces of a heat processable photosensitive material. Leavitt, col 2, ll. 36-38 and col. 1, ll. 54-59. Spaces labeled 18 and 23 indicate the spacing around film 10. Id., col. 3, ll. 4-7 and 22-29. The second solution in Leavitt also involves supplying cooled and heated air to opposing sides of the film. However, the teaching of Leavitt includes cooled air supplied via a drum made of microporous material upon which the film substrate is adjacently provided, as illustrated in Figure 3B reproduced below. Leavitt, col. 4, l. 13 to col. 5, l. 8. The cooled air within the drum escapes through the passages in the microporous material into the Appeal 2014-001756 Reexamination Control 95/001,962 Patent 6,797,454 B1 18 space between the film and the surface of the drum “to support film 30 in spaced relationship from drum 34.” Leavitt, col. 4, ll. 23-27. Figure 3B depicts a front partially sectional view of an alternative heat developing apparatus. Leavitt, col. 2, ll. 41-44. “To qualify as prior art for an obviousness analysis, a reference must qualify as ‘analogous art,’ i.e., it must satisfy one of the following conditions: (1) the reference must be from the same field of endeavor; or (2) the reference must be reasonably pertinent to the particular problem with which the inventor is involved.” K-TEC, Inc. v. Vita-Mix Corp., 696 F.3d 1364, 1375 (Fed. Cir. 2012). “If a reference disclosure has the same purpose as the claimed invention, the reference relates to the same problem, and that Appeal 2014-001756 Reexamination Control 95/001,962 Patent 6,797,454 B1 19 fact supports use of that reference in an obviousness rejection.” In re Clay, 966 F.2d 656, 659 (Fed. Cir. 1992). Each of Scott and Leavitt addresses the same problem of thermal distortion of a substrate as described in Bhateja. Accordingly, we agree with Respondent that Scott and Leavitt are analogous art and thus relevant to the teachings of Bhateja and Martens. However, the mere presence of a known feature in analogous art is insufficient to establish obviousness. “[A] patent composed of several elements is not proved obvious merely by demonstrating that each of its elements was, independently, known in the prior art.” KSR Int'l Co. v. Teleflex Inc., 550 U.S. 398, 418 (2007). For a determination of obviousness, there must be both a reason why the skilled artisan would have made the combination and reasonable expectation of success based on a preponderance of the evidence of record. The Requester contends that cooling as taught by Scott and Leavitt is a simple substitution for the annealing process of Bhateja. App. Br. 15. Alternatively, the Requester contends that “a person of ordinary skill in the art would need to make routine design choices to adapt the cooling means of Leavitt and Scott to the apparatus of Bhateja and Martens; such alterations would be simple and non-inventive.” App. Br. 16. For example, Requester contends that “it would be easy to alter the drum to enable it to circulate cooling gases, which would thereby cool the substrate.” App. Br. 18. In support of this argument, Requester relies on the teachings of Hardin,7 which 7 US 4,756,249, issued July 12, 1998 to Philip J. Hardin. Requester did not include Hardin as a prior art reference in the rejection of the claims of the Appeal 2014-001756 Reexamination Control 95/001,962 Patent 6,797,454 B1 20 describes providing a path for forcing cooling air through the interior of a roller that is used in the inkers of printing presses. See Hardin, Abstract. We disagree with the Requester. The difference in operation between development of a flexographic plate and thermal development of a photoimage are such that, without the hindsight knowledge of the ’454 patent, one of ordinary skill in the art would not have had predictable expectation of success in applying forced cooling of a substrate as described in Scott and Leavitt as part of the thermal development process and apparatus of the flexographic plates of Bhateja and Martens. In particular, the thermal development apparatuses of Bhateja and Martens operate substantially the same as in the present invention, namely by heating the irradiated photosensitive material and removing melted portions thereof by pressing a web firmly against the photosensitive element. See e.g., Fig. 15 of the ’454 patent reproduced above. In Bhateja, the material is only removed by direct contact between the heated drum that holds the photosensitive element and the heated roller supporting the web material. Accordingly, the solution provided by Scott and the first solution of Leavitt, which include a cooled gas bearing to support the film, is incompatible with the operation taught by Bhateja and Martens because direct contact between the drum and the hot developer roll is necessary to facilitate pressing the web into the melted material. Requester has not shown that the ordinarily skilled worker would have expected that the rigidity provided by a solid support also would have been provided by a cooled gas bearing. We conclude that one of ’454 patent, only as evidence that designing a drum with a free flow of air for cooling would have been within the skill of an ordinary artisan. App. Br. 17. Appeal 2014-001756 Reexamination Control 95/001,962 Patent 6,797,454 B1 21 ordinary skill in the art would not have had expected success in altering the operation of the apparatus taught in Bhateja and Martens to facilitate forced cooling of the substrate base in the manner described in Scott and the first embodiment of Leavitt. We recognize that “[t]he test for obviousness is not whether the features of a secondary reference may be bodily incorporated into the structure of the primary reference . . . Rather, the test is what the combined teachings of those references would have suggested to those of ordinary skill in the art.” App. Br. 17 (quoting In re Keller, 642 F.2d 413,425 (CCPA 1981). “A person of ordinary skill is also a person of ordinary creativity, not an automaton.” App. Br. 22 (quoting KSR, 550 U.S. at 420-21). Nonetheless, Requester provides insufficient evidence that the skilled artisan predictably would have been able to modify the gas bearing structure of Scott and the first embodiment of Leavitt in a manner that would have provided the necessary direct contact used in the development process of Bhateja and Martens. With respect to the second embodiment of Leavitt, in which the cooling gas is provided in a microporous drum positioned adjacent the film, we similarly find that the skilled artisan would not have had an expectation of success in incorporating a cooled drum into the operation of the thermal development apparatus of Bhateja and Martens. Our reasoning is explained below.8 8 Similarly to the air bearing of the first embodiment of Leavitt, the Examiner found that the microporous surface of the drum of Leavitt would not have provided the direct contact used in the development process of Bhateja and Martens. See RAN 19, 30-31, and 33. Requester presents Appeal 2014-001756 Reexamination Control 95/001,962 Patent 6,797,454 B1 22 However, Requester has not established that a skilled artisan would have had a reasonable expectation that the processes of Bhateja and Martens would operate properly with a cooled rather than a heated drum. The development processes in Bhateja and Martens have specific heating conditions that allow for the removal of the melted photosensitive material without distorting the substrate. Those conditions include the controlled heating of the photosensitive element substrate via a preheated drum as a required feature. See Bhateja, p. 11, l. 9-11 (transport drum is maintained at 65°C [149°F]); Martens, p. 16, l. 12-15 (element carrying substrate maintained at 60°C [140°F]). The record before us does not demonstrate that the skilled artisan would have expected success in the overall process or apparatus taught by Bhateja and Martens in cooling rather than heating the drum supporting the substrate without the hindsight provided by the ’454 patent. See RAN 18 and 34. Requester is proposing more than the simple and predictable substitution of one known drum for another. The modification of the process of Bhateja involves altering the thermal development process of reasonable arguments about the nip of Bhateja and Martens overcoming the air escaping from the micropores and pushing an air supported plate into direct contact with the surface of the drum at the critical point in the process. Req. App. Br. 26. However, we note that the embodiment of a drum described in the ’454 patent has cooling air entering and exiting axially, which does not interfere with the direct contact of the plate and the drum. The axial arrangement is not described by Leavitt, and we have insufficient evidence to determine whether an axial arrangement is critical to the functioning of the process of Bhateja and Martens, to the extent that a cooled rather than heated drum would have been obvious to one of ordinary skill in the art in the first place. Appeal 2014-001756 Reexamination Control 95/001,962 Patent 6,797,454 B1 23 Bhateja and Martens to accommodate a cooled rather than a heated drum. The only place where such a teaching is to be found in the present record is in Patent Owner’s own disclosure of the invention. See ’454 patent, col. 24, ll. 5-9. Requester has directed us to no persuasive evidence to suggest that the skilled artisan would have understood such a change in drum temperature reasonably would have been successful in the process of Bhateja and Martens. While Scott teaches that the temperature of the substrate in the photoimage development process of Scott could be alternatively cooled or heated, there is insufficient persuasive evidence to suggest that the heating conditions for developing a photo image are substantially similar to that of the development process of Bhateja and Martens that altering the support drum from a heated drum to a cooled drum would have predictably allowed for the overall development (i.e., the removal of material via a heated web) of the photosensitive plate. While Hardin may provide evidence that cooled drums were known in related art, the evidence of record does not show that the development process of Bhateja and Martens would have been expected to be successful with a cooled rather than a heated drum. Rather, the evidence shows that the heating conditions for these devices are critical to their successful operation. From the evidence of record, there is no persuasive expectation that changing the drum from a heated structure to a cooled structure would provide sufficient heating of the photosensitive element overall to allow for removal of the melted photosensitive material. Requester also argues that adding a forced cooling means would have been obvious because there are a finite number of identified solutions in the Appeal 2014-001756 Reexamination Control 95/001,962 Patent 6,797,454 B1 24 art, and the skilled artisan would have good reason to use any of these known techniques. App. Br. 15-16. The record before us lacks probative evidence to support the Requester’s position that “there are a finite number of identified solutions.” To the contrary, the record shows there are a great variety of ways to address thermal distortion of the substrate, including annealing of the substrate, and there may be others that are known in the art that are not of record. TIME PERIOD FOR RESPONSE In accordance with 37 C.F.R. § 41.79(a)(1), the “[p]arties to the appeal may file a request for rehearing of the decision within one month of the date of: . . . [t]he original decision of the Board under § 41.77(a).” A request for rehearing must be in compliance with 37 C.F.R. § 41.79(b). Comments in opposition to the request and additional requests for rehearing must be in accordance with 37 C.F.R. § 41.79(c) & (d), respectively. Under 37 C.F.R. § 41.79(e), the times for requesting rehearing under paragraph (a) of this section, for requesting further rehearing under paragraph (d) of this section, and for submitting comments under paragraph (c) of this section may not be extended. An appeal to the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit under 35 U.S.C. §§ 141-144 and 315 and 37 C.F.R. § 1.983 for an inter partes reexamination proceeding “commenced” on or after November 2, 2002 may not be taken “until all parties' rights to request rehearing have been exhausted, at which time the decision of the Board is final and Appeal 2014-001756 Reexamination Control 95/001,962 Patent 6,797,454 B1 25 appealable by any party to the appeal to the Board.” 37 C.F.R. § 41.81. See also MPEP § 2682 (8th ed., Rev. 7, July 2008). AFFIRMED Appeal 2014-001756 Reexamination Control 95/001,962 Patent 6,797,454 B1 26 PATENT OWNER: DICKSTEIN SHAPIRO LLP 1825 EYE STREET NW WASHINGTON, DC 20006 THIRD-PARTY REQUESTER: JOHN L. CORDANI CARMODY & TORRANCE LLP 50 LEAVENWORTH STREET, P.O. BOX 1110 WATERBURY, CT 06271 Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation