Ex Parte Bhan et alDownload PDFBoard of Patent Appeals and InterferencesJun 13, 201211014362 (B.P.A.I. Jun. 13, 2012) 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. 11/014,362 12/16/2004 Opinder Kishan Bhan TH2809 (US) 4663 23632 7590 06/13/2012 SHELL OIL COMPANY P O BOX 2463 HOUSTON, TX 772522463 EXAMINER SINGH, PREM C ART UNIT PAPER NUMBER 1771 MAIL DATE DELIVERY MODE 06/13/2012 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 Shell Oil Company ____________________ Appeal 2010-009553 Application 11/014,362 Inventors: Opinder Kishan Bahn and Scott Lee Wellington Technology Center 1700 ____________________ Before RICHARD E. SCHAFER, CHUNG K. PAK and TERRY J. OWENS, Administrative Patent Judges. SCHAFER, Administrative Patent Judge. DECISION ON APPEAL Appeal 2010-009553 Application 11/014,362 2 The Shell Oil Company (Applicant) appeals an Examiner’s decision rejecting Claims 104-109. 35 U.S.C. §§ 6(b) and 134(a). Because we do not perceive error in the Examiner’s decision that the subject matter of these claims would have been obvious, we affirm. The Claimed Subject Matter Applicant claims an oil product having specified amounts of certain selected ingredients per gram of oil. The oil includes at most 0.004 grams of oxygen, 0.003 grams of sulfur, 0.04 grams of nitrogen, and 0.2 grams of residue. The oil must also have the following properties: a total acid number (TAN) of no more than 0.5 and an API Gravity of no more than 19. The ASTM test protocols used for determining the amounts of each of the specified constituents and the values for the specified properties are also stated in the claims. However, the use of the specific standardized ASTM tests is not argued to patentably distinguish the claimed subject matter over the prior art. Exemplary Claim Claim 104 is representative and reproduced below: 104. A crude product having, per gram of crude product: at most 0.004 grams of oxygen, as determined by ASTM Method E385; at most 0.003 grams of sulfur, as determined by ASTM Method D4294; at most 0.04 grams of basic nitrogen, as determined by ASTM Method D2896; at least 0.2 grams of residue, as determined by ASTM Method D5307; and the crude product has a total acid number (TAN) of at most 0.5, as determined by ASTM Method D664 and the API gravity of the crude product is at most 19. Appeal 2010-009553 Application 11/014,362 3 Rejection Claims 104 to 109 stand rejected under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as unpatentable over Bridges.1 Hodges2 and Collins3 were relied on by the Examiner in response to certain arguments made by Applicant. Bridges Bridges describes a process for producing olefins for petroleum residua. The Examiner specifically directs to the composition described in Table 3, at Column 11. Answer, 3. That table describes a fractionated petroleum residuum from West African crude oil. Bridges, 10:65-67. The residuum is said to have the following: Sulfur 0.2 wt % Nitrogen 0.2 wt % API Gravity 20.7 The Examiner also found that the distillation curve at Column 11, lines 12-25 showed a residue as defined by Applicant of about 0.35 gram per gram of oil. Answer, 3.4 Differences between Bridges and the claimed subject matter Comparison of the oil described in Table 3 of Bridges with the claimed subject matter shows the following differences: 1 U.S. Patent 6,303,842 B1 issued Oct. 16, 2001. 2 U.S. Patent 2,581,102 issued Jan. 1, 1952. 3 U.S. Publication 2002/0125175 A1 published Sept. 12, 2002. 4 Applicant defines “residue” as the components that boil above 538ºC. Written Description, 24:1-2. Bridges’ distillation table shows 40% or 0.4 grams/gram remain at 524ºC and 30% or 0.03 grams/gram remain at 578ºC. A residue of 0.35 at 538ºC is a reasonable estimate. In any event, the residue is between 0.30 and 0.40 at 538ºC meeting the residue requirement of Claim 104 of at least 0.20 grams/gram of oil. Appeal 2010-009553 Application 11/014,362 4 1. The amount of oxygen is unspecified; 2. The TAN is unspecified; and 3. The API gravity is 20.7 above the maximum permitted of 19. Each difference is asserted by Applicant to patentably distinguish the claimed product from the oil described by Bridges. See Brief 5. The Examiner’s and Applicant’s positions The Examiner concluded that these differences would not have rendered the claimed subject matter unobvious. The Examiner finds that since TAN and oxygen are unspecified, they should be presumed to be either minimal trace amounts or zero and therefore meet the claim limitation of at most 0.5 and 0.004, respectively. Answer, 4. With respect to the API gravity, the Examiner finds: A slight difference between the claimed and Bridges value of API gravity (19 versus 20.7) could be attributed to the different techniques used for the determination of API. Bridges uses ASTM D4052 whereas the Applicant uses ASTM D6822. Id. at 7. Applicant responds that the Examiner has not provided evidence to substantiate his position that silence in Bridges would be understood by the hypothetical person having ordinary skill in the art as indicative of no or trace amounts of oxygen (Brief, 5-6) or minimal or zero TAN (id. at 7). Applicant also argues that the Examiner has not provided evidence that the difference in API density were due to the differences in the ASTM D4052 and D6822 testing techniques. Id. at 8. Analysis Claim 104 With respect to the amount of oxygen, we determine that the Examiner’s finding that the oxygen content is either zero or includes only insignificant trace Appeal 2010-009553 Application 11/014,362 5 amounts is reasonable. Bridges’ failure to identify oxygen as a significant ingredient provides a sufficient basis to find that the oil contained none or only insignificant trace amounts were present. In re Preda, 401 F. 2d 825, 826 (CCPA 1968)(In determining what a reference discloses, “it is proper to take into account not only specific teachings of the reference but also the inferences which one skilled in the art would reasonably be expected to draw therefrom.”). Applicant has not directed us to evidence, nor even argued, that oil of the type described in Bridges’ Table 3 would have been expected to have an oxygen content greater than 0.004 grams per gram of oil. The PTO does not have the facilities or resources to procure and test the products of the prior art. See, In re Best, 562 F.2d 1252, 1255 (CCPA 1977). We think it would have been a relatively easy matter for Applicant to have presented, for example, opinion testimony on the oxygen content of the West African crude oil described in Bridges’ Table 3. We also think that the Examiner’s finding that the difference in API gravity was likely due to the different testing protocols is reasonable. Applicant used ASTM D6822 to determine the API gravity. Written Description, 22:12-13. Bridges used ASTM D4052. Bridges, 11, Table 3. We take official notice that the techniques are in fact different. In ASTM D6822 the API gravity is determined by thermohydrometer. ASTM D4052 uses a digital density meter to determine the API gravity by changes in oscillation of an oil sample. One having ordinary skill in the art would have expected that the different test methodologies would give slightly different numerical values for the same oil. Applicant has not directed us to evidence nor argued that the different test protocols would not have yielded somewhat different API gravity values. Again the PTO does not have facilities to perform comparative tests. Best, 562 F.2d. at 1255. Appeal 2010-009553 Application 11/014,362 6 Addressing the TAN limitation, the Examiner additionally relies on Collins. Answer, 7. Collins notes that typical TAN values for oil are in the range of 0.5 to 4. Collins, ¶ 0002. Oils having a TAN in this range are said to cause corrosion problems when the oil is heated to temperatures above 200ºC. Id. Collins teaches that it is desirable to reduce the acidity of the oils to avoid corrosion. Collins, ¶ 0002. Collins describes a number of processes said to reduce TAN. Id. at ¶¶ 0003 - 0009. Collins also teaches that the TAN should preferably be reduced to 0.1-0.5. Id. at ¶ 0054. To the extent that the oil described in Bridges’ Table 3 had a TAN of greater than 0.5, it would have been obvious to reduce the TAN to below this level. Bridges’ method of forming olefins from the oil distillates includes heating the residuum to a temperature of 340 to 450º C. Bridges, 7:59-62. One having ordinary skill in the art would have recognized that oils with a TAN above 0.5 would cause corrosion problems at those temperatures. Collins, ¶ 0002. The person of ordinary skill in the art would have been motivated to lower the TAN to 0.1- 0.5, as taught by Collins, to minimize corrosion problems. Collins, ¶ 0054. To the extent the residuum described by Bridges had a TAN above 0.5, it would have been obvious to use the known techniques described by Collins to lower the value to below 0.5 to minimize corrosion problems. Specifying a TAN of no greater than 0.5 does not recite an unobvious distinction over the prior art. The decision of the Examiner that the subject matter of Claim 104 would have been obvious is affirmed. Claims 105 – 109 Claims 105 -109 depend directly from Claim 1. Applicant does not assert the additional subject matter of these claims as patentably distinguishing the claims over the prior art. We, therefore, select Claim 104 as representative of Claims 105 Appeal 2010-009553 Application 11/014,362 7 – 109 and affirm the rejection of those claims for the reasons stated with respect to Claim 104. 37 CFR § 41.67(c)(1)(vii). DECISION The Examiner’s decision rejecting the subject matter of Claims 104 – 109 under 35 USC § 103(a) is affirmed. No time period for taking any subsequent action in connection with this appeal may be extended under 37 C.F.R. § 1.136. AFFIRMED bar Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation