Ex Parte 8101808 et alDownload PDFPatent Trial and Appeal BoardAug 30, 201695000666 (P.T.A.B. Aug. 30, 2016) 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. 95/000,666 05/07/2012 8101808 GEVO-048/09US 310142-2361 7380 58249 7590 08/30/2016 COOLEY LLP ATTN: Patent Group 1299 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW Suite 700 Washington, DC 20004 EXAMINER HUANG, EVELYN MEI ART UNIT PAPER NUMBER 3991 MAIL DATE DELIVERY MODE 08/30/2016 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 PATENT TRIAL AND APPEAL BOARD ____________ BUTAMAX ADVANCED BIOFUELS LLC Requester and Respondent v. GEVO, INC. Patent Owner and Appellant ____________ Appeal 2016-003410 Reexamination Control 95/000,666 Patent 8,101,808 B2 Technology Center 3900 ____________ Before RICHARD M. LEBOVITZ, RAE LYNN P. GUEST, and ZHENYU YANG, Administrative Patent Judges. LEBOVITZ, Administrative Patent Judge. DECISION ON APPEAL This is a decision on the appeal by the Patent Owner from the Patent Examiner’s final rejection of claims 1–4, 6–10, 12, 14, 15, 17, 19–30, 32, 33, 35, 37–43, 61–66, 69–73, 133–137, and 140–168 in the above-identified inter partes reexamination of United States Patent 8,101,808 B2. The Board’s jurisdiction for this appeal is under 35 U.S.C. §§ 6(b), 134, and 315 (pre-AIA). We affirm. Appeal 2016-003410 Reexamination Control 95/000,666 Patent 8,101,808 B2 2 I. STATEMENT OF THE CASE The patent in dispute in this appeal is US 8,101,808 B2 (“the ’808 patent”) which issued January 24, 2012. A request for inter partes reexamination of the ’808 patent under 35 U.S.C. §§ 311–318 and 37 C.F.R. §§ 1.902–1.997 was filed May 7, 2012. The Third Party Requester is Butamax Advance Biofuels LLC (“Requester”). Requester Respondent Br. 1. The real party in interest for the ’808 patent is GEVO, Inc. (“Patent Owner”). Appeal Br. 1. The claimed subject matter of the ’808 patent is directed to methods of producing a C3-C6 alcohol, such as butanol, by culturing a microorganism in a fermentation medium in a fermentor and recovering the alcohol. The method includes separating an alcohol-rich phase from a water-rich (or alcohol-depleted) phase and conducting the water-rich phase back to the fermentor. Claims 1–4, 6–10, 12, 14, 15, 17, 19–30, 32, 33, 35, 37–43, 61–66, 69–73, 133–137, and 140–168 stand finally rejected by the Examiner. Right of Appeal Notice (“RAN”) (Feb. 4, 2015). Claims 157–168 were added during this reexamination proceeding. The claims stand rejected by the Examiner as follows: 1. Ground 113 - Claims 1–4, 6–10, 12, 15, 17, 19–24, 26–30, 33, 35, 37–40, 43, 61–64, 69–73, 133–137, 140–144, and 148–152 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) (pre-AIA) as obvious in view of English1 and D’Amore II.2 1 English et al., US 4,349,628, issued Sept. 14, 1982 (“English”). 2 D’Amore et al., US 2008/0045754 A1, published Feb. 21, 2008 (“D’Amore II”). Appeal 2016-003410 Reexamination Control 95/000,666 Patent 8,101,808 B2 3 2. Ground 114 - Claims 2–4 and 145–147 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) (pre-AIA) as obvious in view of English, D’Amore II, and Bramucci.3 3. Ground 115 - Claim 14 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) (pre-AIA) as obvious in view of English, D’Amore II, and Donaldson.4 4. Ground 116 - Claims 30, 32, and 63–66 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) (pre-AIA) as obvious in view of English, D’Amore II, and Tedder.5 5. Ground 117 - Claim 41 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) (pre-AIA) as obvious in view of English, D’Amore II, and Wilke.6 6. Ground 118 - Claim 42 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) (pre-AIA) as obvious in view of English, D’Amore II, and Freier.7 7. Ground 120 - Claims 153–156 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) (pre-AIA) as obvious in view of English, D’Amore II, and Hess.8 8. Ground 121 - Claims 1, 7, 9, 12, 19–24, 26–30, 33, 61–64, 69–73, 133–137, 140, 142, and 148–156 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) (pre-AIA) as obvious in view of Maiorella II,9 Hess, and D’Amore II. 3 Bramucci et al., US 2008/0124774 A1, published May 29, 2008 (“Bramucci”). 4 Donaldson et al., US 2007/0092957 A1, published Apr. 26, 2007 (“Donaldson”). 5 Tedder, US 4,517,298, issued May 14, 1985. 6 Wilke et al., US 4,359,533, issued Nov. 16, 1982 (“Wilke”). 7 Freier et al., Characterization of Clostridium thermocellum JW20, 54 Applied Environmental Microbiology 204–211 (1998) (“Freier”). 8 Hess, BP and DuPont Plan Biobutanol, Chemical and Engineering News 9 (2006). 9 Maiorella et al., Economic Evaluation of Alternative Ethanol Fermentation Processes, 26 Biotechnology and Bioengineering 1003–1025 (1984) (“Maiorella II”). Appeal 2016-003410 Reexamination Control 95/000,666 Patent 8,101,808 B2 4 9. Ground 122 - Claims 2–4 and 145–147 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) (pre-AIA) as obvious in view of Maiorella II, Hess, D’Amore II, and Bramucci. 10. Ground 123 - Claim 14 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) (pre-AIA) as obvious in view of Maiorella II, Hess, D’Amore II, and Donaldson. 11. Ground 124 - Claims 63–66 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) (pre-AIA) as obvious in view of Maiorella II, Hess, D’Amore II, and Tedder. 12. Ground 125 - Claim 32 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) (pre-AIA) as obvious in view of Maiorella II, Hess, D’Amore II, and Lu.10 13. Ground 126 - Claims 35 and 37–43 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as obvious in view of Maiorella II, Hess, D’Amore II, and Saida.11 14. Ground 140 - Claims 25 and 157–168 under 35 U.S.C. § 112, first paragraph (pre-AIA), as failing to comply with the written description requirement. 15. Ground 141 - Claims 25 and 157–168 under 35 U.S.C. § 112, first paragraph (pre-AIA), as failing to comply with the enablement requirement. II. CLAIMS There are three independent claims which are pending, claims 1, 153, and 157. Claim 1 is representative and reads as follows (underlining and brackets indicate changes relative to the original claim): 10 Lu et al., Salting-out separation and liquid-liquid equilibrium of tertiary butanol aqueous solution, 78 Chemical Engineering Journal 165–171 (2000) (“Lu”). 11 Saida, US 4,822,737, issued Apr. 18, 1989. Appeal 2016-003410 Reexamination Control 95/000,666 Patent 8,101,808 B2 5 1. A method to recover a C3-C6 alcohol from a fermentation broth [comprising microorganisms and the C3-C6 alcohol,] comprising: a. in a fermentor, culturing a microorganism in a fermentation medium, thereby providing a fermentation broth comprising the microorganism and the C3-C6 alcohol; b. removing a portion of the fermentation broth from the fermentor; [a] c. [increasing the activity of the C3-C6 alcohol in a] distilling the portion of the fermentation broth, thereby forming a C3-C6 alcohol-rich vapor phase which is [to] at least [that of saturation of] saturated in the C3-C6 alcohol, [in the portion] and a C3-C6 alcohol-depleted liquid phase comprising viable microorganisms; [b] d. forming a C3-C6 alcohol-rich liquid phase and a water-rich liquid phase from the [portion of the fermentation broth] C3-C6 alcohol-rich vapor phase; [and] [c] e. separating the C3-C6 alcohol-rich liquid phase from the water-rich liquid phase; and f. conducting the C3-C6 alcohol-depleted liquid phase comprising viable microorganisms back to the fermentor. III. RELATED INTER PARTES REVIEW The ’808 patent is related to two U.S. Patents which have been subject to Inter Partes Review under 35 U.S.C. § 311. U.S. Patent 8,283,505 (“the ’505 patent) issued on October 9, 2012, from a continuation application of the ’808 patent. The ’505 patent was subject to Inter Partes Review in IPR2013-00215 filed on March 26, 2013. On September 23, 2014, the Board entered a Final Written Decision which invalidated all claims. ButamanTM Advanced BioFuels LLC v. Gevo, Inc., IPR2013-00215 (PTAB Sept. 23, 2014) (Paper 47). The claims of the ’505 Appeal 2016-003410 Reexamination Control 95/000,666 Patent 8,101,808 B2 6 patent are similar to those in the ’808 patent, but are limited to producing isobutanol. U.S. Patent 8,304,588 (“the ’588 patent”) issued on November 6, 2012, from a continuation application of the ’808 patent. The ’588 patent was subject to Inter Partes Review in IPR2013-00214 filed on March 26, 2013. On September 23, 2014, the Board entered a Final Written Decision which invalidated all claims. ButamanTM Advanced BioFuels LLC v. Gevo, Inc., IPR2013-00214 (PTAB Sept. 23, 2014) (Paper 46). The decision on appeal to the Federal Circuit was affirmed. In re Gevo, Inc., 638 F. App’x 1018 (Fed. Cir. 2016). The claims of the ’588 patent are similar to those in the ’808 patent, but are limited to producing isobutanol. Claim 1 of the ’588 patent has steps in which “the isobutanol-depleted portion of the fermentation medium” and the “water-rich liquid phase” are returned to the fermenter. These are steps are similar to the two steps in claim 157 in this proceeding. In IPR2013-00214, claim 1 was found to be obvious under 35 U.S.C. § 103 in view of English, Hess, and D’Amore I. Claim 157 in this proceeding was not subject to a prior art rejection. DAUGULIS DECLARATIONS During the course of the inter partes reexamination, Requester provided three declarations by Andrew J. Daugulis, Ph.D., in support of the obviousness of the claimed subject matter. Patent Owner argues that the Examiner improperly relied on the declarations because the Examiner cited the declarations “in support of the rejections,” but rejections in Appeal 2016-003410 Reexamination Control 95/000,666 Patent 8,101,808 B2 7 reexamination proceedings can only be based on either prior art patents or printed publications. Appeal Br. 12. In Rejection 121, The Examiner cited the Second Daugulis declaration, paragraph 15, as establishing that “it was well known in the art that . . . C3-C6 alcohols (such as butanol) . . . are not completely miscible in water.” RAN 28. To the extent that this fact is necessary to sustain this, or any other, rejection, Dr. Daugulis’s testimony in paragraph 15 merely establishes a well-known fact at the time of the invention about the properties of butanol in water. The rejection is thus based on a fact that Dr. Daugulis testified was known to one of ordinary skill in the art at the time of the invention. Patent Owner has not established that Dr. Daugulis was incorrect in his testimony or that the ordinary skilled worker was not aware of this fact at the time of the invention. Consequently, we conclude that the Examiner did not err in relying on Dr. Daugulis’s declaration as factual evidence of what the skilled artisan would have understood from the teachings of the prior art. Patent Owner also challenges the Daugulis declarations as containing conclusory legal opinions with respect to statements regarding the obviousness of the claimed invention and an allegedly undisclosed material business relationship with the Requester. Appeal Br. 13–15. Since the allegedly conclusory opinions expressed in the Daugulis declarations were not relied upon in reaching the Decision to affirm the Examiner, it is unnecessary for us to address these arguments. Appeal 2016-003410 Reexamination Control 95/000,666 Patent 8,101,808 B2 8 OBVIOUSNESS – REJECTIONS 113 AND 121 Independent claim 1 is rejected as obvious under Grounds of Rejection 113 and 121. Rejection 113 of claim 1 is based on English and D’Amore II. Rejection 121 of claim 1 is based on Maiorella II, Hess, and D’Amore II. English and Maiorella II are applied by the Examiner for the same teachings. Compare RAN 15 and 27. Patent Owner acknowledged that the publications are applied by the Examiner for the same teachings, and consequently did not argue the rejections based on Maiorella II separately, but rather stated that the rejected claims in Rejection 121 are patentable for the same reasons that the claims in Rejection 113 are patentable over the combination of English and D’Amore II. Appeal Br. 29. For this reason, while we only address the rejections based on English and D’Amore II, our reasoning and conclusions are applicable to the rejections citing Maiorella II and Hess. A. Rejection of independent claim 1 Independent claim 1 is directed to a method of recovering a C3-C6 alcohol from a fermentation broth. The claim has six steps, numbered a. through f. The method involves culturing a microorganism in the fermentation broth in a fermentor to produce the C3-C6 alcohol (step a). A portion of the fermentation broth is removed from the fermentor (step b) and this portion is treated in the subsequent steps (steps c–e) to remove the alcohol and return or recycle the alcohol-depleted liquid phase back to the fermentor (step f). The purpose of the removal and return step is to continuously reduce the alcohol in the fermentor “since presence of high Appeal 2016-003410 Reexamination Control 95/000,666 Patent 8,101,808 B2 9 concentrations of alcohol in the fermentation broth can adversely impact the ability of the micro-organisms to produce alcohol.” ’808 patent, col. 34, ll. 31–38. According to the patent, returning water back to the fermentor reduces the energy and operating costs required to remove the alcohol from the fermentation broth (“dry the spent fermentation broth”). Id. at col. 8, ll. 23–42. The Examiner found that English describes step a of culturing in a fermentation medium to provide a fermentation broth and step b of removing a portion of the fermentation broth from the fermentor. RAN 15. In English, the removed portion is transferred to a flash vessel 208 (also called a “separator”), where step c is accomplished by distilling the fermentation broth to form 1) “a C3-C6 alcohol-rich vapor phase which is at least saturated in the C3-C6 alcohol” and 2) “a C3-C6 alcohol-depleted liquid phase comprising viable microorganisms.” Id. The Examiner further found that English describes returning the “C3-C6 alcohol-depleted liquid phase comprising viable microorganisms” of step c to the fermentor as required by step f of claim 1. Id. The Examiner found that English’s method does not describe step d, in which the “C3-C6 alcohol-rich vapor phase” of step c is formed into “a C3-C6 alcohol-rich liquid phase and a water-rich liquid phase,” and step e, in which the phases of step d are then separated. Id. at 15–16. However, the Examiner found that both steps d and e are described by D’Amore. Id. at 16. The Examiner found that English exemplified a process for recovering ethanol, a C2 alcohol, but found that English states that its invention could also be used to recover “other alcohols” and specifically mentioned Appeal 2016-003410 Reexamination Control 95/000,666 Patent 8,101,808 B2 10 “butanol,” which is a C4-alcohol. Id. at 15. The Examiner reasoned that it would have been obvious to one of ordinary skill in the art to have applied D’Amore II’s teachings to English when producing n-butanol by fermentation because ethanol (C2 alcohol) in English’s exemplified process forms a homogeneous ethanol/water azeotrope that upon condensation forms a single phase liquid. But for the recovery of ethanol- like C3-C6 alcohols (such as butanol) that are not completely miscible in water, condensing the vapor phase is known to form a C3-C6 alcohol-rich liquid phase and a water-rich liquid phase, which can be easily separated in a decanter, as specifically described by D’Amore II in the same field of endeavor. Id. at 16. Patent Owner contends that the rejection is improper because the Examiner did not demonstrate “a reasonable expectation of success, and the proposed combination would render English unsuitable for its intended purpose” of purifying ethanol. Appeal Br. 15. Discussion Patent Owner contends that modifying English with D’Amore II’s teachings would eliminate the advantages described by English for its alcohol purification process (Appeal Br. 16) and make it unsuitable for purifying ethanol (id. at 18). As a result, Patent Owner argues that the modification proposed by the Examiner would make it “inoperable” for purifying ethanol and would therefore fundamentally change the principles of operation of the English process. Id. at 18, 22. Appeal 2016-003410 Reexamination Control 95/000,666 Patent 8,101,808 B2 11 These arguments do not persuade us that the Examiner erred in rejecting the claims as obvious in view of English and D’Amore II, or Maiorella II, Hess, and D’Amore II. Is the combination of publications improper? As found by the Examiner, English explicitly teaches utilizing butanol in its process: “[T]he invention is also suitable for the preparation of other alcohols and ketones such as butanol, isopropanol and acetone from appropriate feedstocks using suitable microorganisms.” English, col. 4, ll. 1–4. Patent Owner’s argument about fundamentally changing English’s principle of operation because it would no longer work to purify ethanol ignores the explicit teaching in English that its process is applicable to other alcohols, including butanol. When butanol is utilized, a preponderance of the evidence establishes the one of ordinary in the art would know that English’s process for purifying ethanol would require modification. This is explained in more detail below. Patent Owner’s declarant Angelo Lucia, Ph.D., testified that ethanol forms a homogenous azeotrope, while 1-butanol (also known as n-butanol) and isobutanol form heterogeneous azeotropes. First Lucia Decl.12 ¶ 9. Dr. Lucia testified in his declaration that English’s process would not be capable of purifying 1-butanol made in a fermentation process because the fermentation process would result in a heterogeneous azeotrope which would require different steps than those described in English. Id. ¶¶ 12, 13, 17. Based on Dr. Lucia’s testimony, which refers to prior art teachings for 12 First Declaration of Angelo Lucia, Ph.D., dated June 7, 2013. Appeal 2016-003410 Reexamination Control 95/000,666 Patent 8,101,808 B2 12 separating alcohols from homogeneous and heterogeneous azeotropes, we conclude that the methods for separating both types of azeotropes were known in the art. First Lucia Decl. ¶ 12; Second Lucia Decl.13 ¶¶ 14, 25. This conclusion is consistent with D’Amore II which the Examiner found to describe recovering 1-butanol from a heterogenous azeotrope. RAN 16; D’Amore II ¶ 43. Thus, the person of ordinary skill in the art who sought to separate butanol from a fermentation process, as suggested by English, would know that it forms a heterogeneous azeotrope and would have known how to separate it from the teachings of D’Amore II. Dr. Lucia testified that it would not have been obvious to modify English with D’Amore II’s teachings because they employ fundamentally different and distinct separation technologies. First Lucia Decl. ¶ 26. This argument is not persuasive because Dr. Lucia admitted that English’s process would require modification to purify an azeotrope based on 1- butanol. Id. ¶¶ 12, 13, 17. The preponderance of the evidence establishes that the modification to purify butanol was known in the prior art and would have been obvious to implement when carrying out English’s suggestion to utilize its fermentation process for butanol. Dr. Lucia also testifies that modifying English would result in the loss of the goal of English to reduce energy utilization and efficiency. Id. ¶¶ 14, 27. However, Dr. Lucia did not explain why integrating D’Amore II into English would result in the loss of energy and efficiency, particularly when the step of recycling fermentation broth back to the fermenter is conserved. 13 Second Declaration of Angelo Lucia, Ph.D., dated January 7, 2014. Appeal 2016-003410 Reexamination Control 95/000,666 Patent 8,101,808 B2 13 Would there have been an expectation of success? Patent Owner also contends that the rejection should be reversed because there was no expectation of success that D’Amore II could be implemented in English. This argument is not supported by adequate evidence. Dr. Lucia described two different designs for butanol separating, stating that “without significant process and economic simulation work, it is simply not possible for even a skilled chemical engineer to form an informed opinion as to which . . . is the most suitable process design for a given 1- butanol/water separation.” First Lucia Decl. ¶ 8. However, a process design does not have to be the “most suitable” for it to have been obvious. “[J]ust because better alternatives exist in the prior art does not mean that an inferior combination is inapt for obviousness purposes.” In re Mouttet, 686 F.3d 1322, 1334 (Fed. Cir. 2012). The key question is whether such alternative, which in this case would be D’Amore II’s process, is operable to separate butanol when combined with English. A teaching that a process would be inferior or less desirable is not a teaching away unless the use would render the process “inoperable.” See In re ICON Health and Fitness Inc., 496 F.3d 1374, 1381 (Fed. Cir. 2007); In re Gurley, 27 F.3d 551, 553 (Fed. Cir. 1994). Inoperability is addressed below. Dr. Lucia stated that “even seemingly small changes can have a substantial impact on the overall process.” First Lucia Decl. ¶ 7. For this reason, Dr. Lucia stated: Knowing this, experienced chemical engineers would not be able to reliably predict the effects of even seemingly small changes in a separation process on process operability, Appeal 2016-003410 Reexamination Control 95/000,666 Patent 8,101,808 B2 14 controllability, process economics, safety, or environmental impact without expending significant effort in analyzing such changes through process simulations and economic analyses. Id., see also id. ¶¶ 10, 24. Despite Dr. Lucia’s statement that English’s process operability, when modified by D’Amore II, would not have been predictable and that there would have been no predictable expectation of success (id. ¶¶ 7, 10, 24, 26), we have not been pointed to adequate evidence to establish a factual basis for this opinion. Dr. Lucia discusses process efficiency (id. ¶¶ 7, 14–15), impact on process economics (id. ¶¶ 16, 19, 28), and energy utilization considerations (id. ¶ 27), but none of these adequately address whether modifying English’s process with the separation steps taught by D’Amore II would be expected to be “inoperable,” namely, not capable of being used successfully, as he asserted. Dr. Lucia takes the position that for the chemical engineer “to form an opinion with respect to whether or not the proposed could be successful, a POSA [person of ordinary skill in the art] would first perform some modeling, simulation, and economic analysis.” Second Lucia Decl. ¶ 41. Dr. Lucia states that there are a number of factors that would have to be considered to determine whether the process would fail. Id. ¶¶ 42, 43. Dr. Lucia states that the modified process would have “a low capital and operating cost process, which is unsafe or difficult to operate or control, [and] would not be considered a successful separation process design.” Id. ¶ 43. Dr. Lucia’s analysis does not adequately address whether the process would work, the proper standard for determining obviousness. In re Gurley, Appeal 2016-003410 Reexamination Control 95/000,666 Patent 8,101,808 B2 15 27 F.3d at 553. Rather, Dr. Lucia focuses on the economy and efficiency of the process without clear identifying those factors which would make the process inoperable. For example, Dr. Lucia states “[i]n certain circumstances, proposed changes may render a process completely inoperable, and significant changes .in design may be required to accommodate these changes.” Second Lucia Decl. ¶ 45. But Dr. Lucia does not specifically identify what changes would “render a process completely inoperable,” particularly how combining D’Amore II with English would be a change that would render D’Amore II inoperable to separate n-butanol. B. Rejection of independent claim 153 Independent claim 153 stands rejected by the Examiner based on English, D’Amore II, and Hess. Patent Owner contends that claim 153 is not obvious for the same reasons argued for the combination of English and D’Amore II. Appeal Br. 28. Patent Owner states that Hess does not remedy the deficiencies in English and D’Amore, and neither does the additionally cited evidence. Id. As we have found, Patent Owner’s arguments regarding the combination of English and D’Amore II unpersuasive, we conclude that independent claim 153 is obvious for the same reasons. C. Rejections of dependent claims Grounds 114–118 and 122–126 involve rejections of dependent claims where the Examiner cited a prior art publication in addition to English and D’Amore II, or Maiorella, Hess, D’Amore II, to meet limitations in the dependent claims. See supra 3–4. For most of the Appeal 2016-003410 Reexamination Control 95/000,666 Patent 8,101,808 B2 16 rejections, Patent Owner argues that the additional publication does not correct the deficiency of the base combination of English and D’Amore II, or Maiorella II, Hess, and D’Amore II. Consequently, since we have already addressed English and D’Amore II, we need not discuss these rejections any further. However, for Rejections 116 and 117, Patent Owner addressed the additionally cited publication. Consequently, these rejections are discussed individually below. 1. Rejection 116 Patent Owner argues that none of the cited publications teach the further alcohol separation limitations recited in claim 32. Appeal Br. 25. The Examiner found that Tedder describes an alcohol separation technique that meets the limitations of claim 32. RAN 23. The Examiner identified where in Tedder the limitations are described. Id. Patent Owner states that the solvent/alcohol stream separated in Tedder is not an “alcohol-rich liquid phase” stream of step d, as in claim 32. Appeal Br. 25–26. However, this argument is not persuasive because the basis of the rejection is the obviousness of applying Tedder’s technique to the alcohol-containing streams described in English as modified by D’Amore II. RAN 23. Patent Owner did not identify a defect in the Examiner’s fact-based reason for applying Tedder to English’s and D’Amore II’s stream. One cannot show nonobviousness by attacking references individually where the rejections are based on combinations of references. In re Merck & Co., Inc., 800 F.2d 1091, 1097 (Fed. Cir. 1986).” Appeal 2016-003410 Reexamination Control 95/000,666 Patent 8,101,808 B2 17 Patent Owner also separately argues claims 65 and 66. Claim 65, which depends from claim 1 and claim 63, requires further “processing the C3-C6 alcohol-rich phase” of claim 1 (see claim 63), where “the step of processing comprises combining the C3-C6 alcohol-rich liquid phase [formed in step d] with a hydrocarbon liquid that is immiscible in water, whereby the combination forms a single uniform phase.” The Examiner found Tedder describes utilizing a hydrophobic carbon solvent, which is an solvent immiscible in water, to form a uniform phase with the alcohol as in claim 65. RAN 23. Claim 66, which depends from claims 1 and 63, recites the same solvent as in claim 65, but whereby a light and heavy phase are formed. The Examiner found that the solvent would form an solvent/alcohol-rich light phase and a water-rich heavy phase. Id. at 24. Patent Owner contends that Tedder teaches extraction directly from a fermentation medium, not from an alcohol-rich liquid phase of claims 65 and 66. Appeal Br. 26. The Examiner responded to this argument by identifying disclosure in Tedder where an organic extractant is described to separate water and alcohol phases. RAN 48–49. The Examiner’s argument is supported at column 4, lines 27–36 and col. 5, lines 12-16 of Tedder. Consequently, we are not persuaded that the Patent Owner identified a reversible error in the Examiner’s finding and reasoning. 2. Rejection 117 Patent Owner separately argues claim 41. Claim 41 depends from claim 1, through claims 39, 38, and 37. Claim 41 recites “wherein the Appeal 2016-003410 Reexamination Control 95/000,666 Patent 8,101,808 B2 18 fermentor is at below atmospheric pressure.” The Examiner found that “Wilke (col. 5, lines 12-13) discloses that fermentation can be performed at below atmospheric pressure.” RAN 24. Indeed, Wilke teaches vacuum fermentation was well known in the art for lowering the boiling point of the alcohol to that of the fermentation temperature for continual vaporization of alcohol from the fermentation broth to avoid self-inhibiting effects of alcohol during the fermentation process. See Wilke, col. 1, ll. 60-68. Patent Owner contends that Wilke does not disclose or suggest heterogeneous azeotropes. Appeal Br. 26. This argument is not persuasive because Wilke was relied upon for the fermentation conditions for alcohol production from microorganisms. A skilled artisan would have recognized that the same vacuum fermentation process would be suitable for other continuous alcohol production processes from microorganisms. CLAIM 157 Claim 157 was added during the reexamination proceeding. See Patent Owner Amendment filed June 10, 2013. Under 37 C.F.R. § 1.906(a), “Claims in an inter partes reexamination proceeding will be examined . . . with respect to subject matter added or deleted in the reexamination proceeding, on the basis of the requirements of 35 U.S.C. 112.” Because claim 157 was added during the proceeding, it is subject to examination based on section 112. Under this statutory authority, the Examiner found that claim 157 does not satisfy the written description and enablement requirements of § 112, first paragraph (pre-AIA). RAN 37, 39. We affirm the written description rejection and reverse the enablement rejection. Appeal 2016-003410 Reexamination Control 95/000,666 Patent 8,101,808 B2 19 Written description rejection Claim 157, like claim 1, is directed to a method of producing a C3-C6 alcohol. The claim recites eight steps, numbered a through h. Step d is “returning the C3-C6 alcohol-depleted portion of the fermentation medium from step (c) to the fermentation unit.” Claim 1 also has such a return step. Step h is drawn to a second return step, “returning the water-rich liquid phase from step (g) back to the fermentor.” This second return step is not recited in claim 1. The Examiner found there is no description in the ’808 patent specification of a method with all eight steps and no description of the second water return step h. RAN 37. Specifically, the Examiner found that the patent specification describes recycling water back to the fermenter after extraction with an alcohol-selective extractant as in steps c and d of claim 157. Id. at 37. However, the Examiner found there is no description of returning a water-rich liquid phase back to the fermenter, where such liquid phase is produced from distilling the remaining alcohol-rich portion of the fermentation medium (step e) after the solvent extraction (step c) as in step h of claim 157. Id. at 38–39. Patent Owner acknowledged while the specification does not provide ipsis verbis description of the claimed combination (i.e., distillation to form an alcohol- rich liquid phase and a water-rich liquid phase [steps e, f, and g of claim 157], and returning the water-rich liquid phase to the fermentor [step h of claim 157]), there are multiple places in the issued patent specification that clearly and unambiguously teach returning a water-rich liquid phase (e.g., from a decanter or liquid-liquid separator) to a fermentor as claimed. Thus, such ipsis verbis description is not required, as a skilled artisan, Appeal 2016-003410 Reexamination Control 95/000,666 Patent 8,101,808 B2 20 confronted with the multiple descriptions of the claimed step of returning a water-rich liquid phase to a fermentor in the issued patent specification, and explicit description of the claimed step of returning the water rich phase to the fermentor as a preferred embodiment, would have understood that Patent Owner clearly contemplated and was in possession of the claimed combination, including returning a water-rich liquid phase (e.g., from a decanter or liquid-liquid separator) to a fermentor, at the time of filing. Appeal Br. 35. To support the written description of the claim, Patent Owner cited disclosure in the ’808 patent at column 4, lines 7, 17–18, column 6, lines 47– 50, column 20, lines 13–18, and original claims 25 and 68. Id. at 34. Legal principles To satisfy the written description requirement of 35 U.S.C. § 112, the inventor must “convey with reasonable clarity to those skilled in the art that, as of the filing date sought, he or she was in possession of the invention.” Vas-Cath Inc. v. Mahurkar, 935 F.2d 1555, 1563–64 (Fed. Cir. 1991). “One shows that one is ‘in possession’ of the invention by describing the invention, with all its claimed limitations.” Lockwood v. Am. Airlines, Inc., 107 F.3d 1565, 1572 (Fed. Cir. 1997). There is no requirement that the wording in the claim be identical to that used in the specification as long as there is sufficient disclosure to show one of skill in the art that the inventor “invented what is claimed.” Union Oil Co. of Cal. v. Atlantic Richfield Co., 208 F.3d 989, 997 (Fed. Cir. 2000). The written description “need not recite the claimed invention in haec verba but [it] must do more than merely disclose that which would render the Appeal 2016-003410 Reexamination Control 95/000,666 Patent 8,101,808 B2 21 claimed invention obvious.” ICU Med., Inc. v. Alaris Med. Sys., Inc., 558 F.3d 1368, 1377 (Fed. Cir. 2009). A description which renders obvious a claimed invention is not sufficient to satisfy the written description requirement of that invention. Lockwood, 107 F.3d at 1572. Thus, so long as “a person of ordinary skill in the art would have understood the inventor to have been in possession of the claimed invention at the time of filing, even if every nuance of the claims is not explicitly described in the specification, then the adequate written description requirement is met.” In re Alton, 76 F.3d 1168, 1175 (Fed. Cir. 1996). Discussion In this case, the disclosure in the ’808 patent identified by Patent Owner to support steps e, f, g, and h refer to the first water recovery step in which water extracted from the fermentation medium is returned to the fermentor. See, e.g., ’808 patent, col. 20, ll. 8–18, describing increasing the activity of alcohol in a portion of the fermentation medium after culturing with a microorganism to produce an alcohol. Patent Owner argues that one of ordinary skill in the art would have understood this disclosure to convey possession of the step of returning a water-rich liquid phase after other process steps in the alcohol production method. Appeal Br. 34–35. However, this argument is flawed for two independent reasons. First, Patent Owner did not establish support in the cited disclosure for steps f, g, and h of the claimed method. In these steps, the vapor phase produced by the distillation of step e is condensed to form an alcohol-rich liquid phase and a water-rich liquid phase (steps f and g), and then the water- Appeal 2016-003410 Reexamination Control 95/000,666 Patent 8,101,808 B2 22 rich liquid phase is returned to the fermenter (step h). Patent Owner has not identified where these steps are described in the cited disclosures at column 4, lines 7, 17–18; column 6, lines 47–50; and column 20, lines 13–18 which they cited for support. Second, while Patent Owner argues that the ordinary skilled worker “would have understood that Patent Owner clearly contemplated and was in possession of the claimed combination,” Patent Owner has not provided evidence, such as testimony by an ordinary skilled worker in the pertinent field of the invention, to substantiate this attorney argument. Appeal Br. 35. When the specification lacks the literal wording recited in a claim added by amendment after the application’s filing date, it must be determined whether the inventors “possessed” what is now claimed. Alton, 76 F.3d at 1175–1176. Possession of the claim limitations must be distinguished from the situation where the added claim limitation, or the new claim, itself, would have been obvious to one of ordinary skill in the art, but is neither literally nor implicitly described by the inventors. ICU Med, 558 F.3d at 1377; Lockwood, 107 F.3d at 1572. In this case, Patent Owner has not provided sufficient evidence to show that the inventor had possession of the claimed invention. The disclosure in the patent identified by Patent Owner is generic, and does not explicitly describe a second post-distillation recycle step in which a vapor is condensed to form a water-rich liquid phase that is returned back to the fermenter. Patent Owner has not provided adequate evidence that such step was possessed by the inventors, even if such a step would have been obvious to one of ordinary skill in the art upon reading the patent disclosure. Appeal 2016-003410 Reexamination Control 95/000,666 Patent 8,101,808 B2 23 Patent Owner also cited to claims 25 and 68, which are original claims of the ’808 patent. Original claims may satisfy the written description requirement. Ariad Pharms., Inc. v. Eli Lilly and Co., 598 F.3d 1336, 1349 (Fed. Cir. 2010). Original claim 68 (now canceled) was an independent claim. It had a single step in which “the water rich phase” is conducted “to the fermentation medium in the step a.” Step a recited “decreasing the activity of water in a portion of the fermentation broth to at least at least that of saturation of the C3-C6 alcohol in the portion.” Claim 25 depends from original claim 1, and is also directed to a first water return step in which a water-rich phase produced from distilling a portion of a fermentation broth is combined with the broth. Patent Owner did not explain in the Appeal Brief how a process with a single step in which water is recycled back to fermentation broth describes a process with a second water return step h in claim 157. The discussion about “possession” versus what would have been obvious to one of ordinary skill in the art applies equally to Patent Owner’s reliance on original claims 25 and 68. Enablement rejection The Examiner rejected the claims as lacking enablement because the “water rich liquid phase recited in step (h) . . . has much higher alcohol concentration than the fermentation medium or the starting aqueous alcohol solution prior to distillation” and the “high amounts of C3-C6 alcohol [] can inhibit alcohol production and growth of microorganisms in the fermentor.” RAN 39–40. Appeal 2016-003410 Reexamination Control 95/000,666 Patent 8,101,808 B2 24 The rejection is reversed. As argued by Patent Owner, the ’808 patent discloses that microorganisms genetically engineered to tolerate higher levels of butanol can be used in the claimed method. Appeal Br. 36. In addition, the patent discloses that as much as 9 wt% of alcohol may be present in the fermentation broth (id.), an amount close to the 8% amount which the Examiner found, without sufficient evidence, “may be toxic to the microorganisms in the fermentor” (RAN 40). Because the rejection is not supported by adequate evidence, we reverse it. SUMMARY For the foregoing reasons, the obviousness rejections of claims 1, 32, 41, 65, 66, and 153 are affirmed (Grounds 113, 116, 120, 121, and 125). The obviousness rejections of the dependent claims were not argued separately and thus fall with claims 1, 32, 41, and 153 (Grounds 113, 114, 115, 116, 117, 118, 120, 211, and 122). See 37 C.F.R. 41.68(c)(1)(vii). The written description rejection of claims 25 and 157–168 (Ground 140) is affirmed. The enablement rejection of claims 25 and 157–168 (Ground 141) is reversed. 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 Appeal 2016-003410 Reexamination Control 95/000,666 Patent 8,101,808 B2 25 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 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). In the event neither party files a request for rehearing within the time provided in 37 C.F.R. § 41.79, and this decision becomes final and appealable under 37 C.F.R. § 41.81, a party seeking judicial review must timely serve notice on the Director of the United States Patent and Trademark Office. See 37 C.F.R. §§ 90.1 and 1.983. No time period for taking any subsequent action in connection with this appeal may be extended under 37 C.F.R. § 1.136(a)(1)(iv). AFFIRMED Appeal 2016-003410 Reexamination Control 95/000,666 Patent 8,101,808 B2 26 PATENT OWNER: COOLEY LLP Attn: Patent Group 1299 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW Suite 700 Washington, DC 20004 THIRD PARTY REQUESTOR: Peter A, Jackman STERNE, KESSLER, GOLDSTEIN & FOX, PLLC 1100 New York Avenue, N.W. Washington, DC 20005-3934 cdc Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation