Ex Parte HuynhDownload PDFPatent Trial and Appeal BoardSep 9, 201311452713 (P.T.A.B. Sep. 9, 2013) 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. 11/452,713 06/13/2006 Steven Huynh ACT-006 4804 47713 7590 09/10/2013 IMPERIUM PATENT WORKS P.O. BOX 607 Pleasanton, CA 94566 EXAMINER RAHMAN, FAHMIDA ART UNIT PAPER NUMBER 2116 MAIL DATE DELIVERY MODE 09/10/2013 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 ____________ Ex parte STEVEN HUYNH ____________ Appeal 2011-004126 Application 11/452,713 Technology Center 2100 ____________ Before HOWARD B. BLANKENSHIP, JENNIFER L. McKEOWN, and DAVID C. McKONE, Administrative Patent Judges. McKONE, Administrative Patent Judge. DECISION ON APPEAL Appellant appeals under 35 U.S.C. § 134(a) from a final rejection of claims 1-201, which constitute all the claims pending in this application. See 2.2 We have jurisdiction under 35 U.S.C. § 6(b). We reverse. 1 The Examiner has withdrawn the rejections of claims 4, 11-15, and 20. See Ans. 2. 2 Throughout this opinion, we refer to the Appeal Brief filed June 1, 2010 (“App. Br.”), the Examiner’s Answer mailed August 30, 2010 (“Ans.”), and the Reply Brief filed October 29, 2010 (“Reply Br.”). Appeal 2011-004126 Application 11/452,713 2 THE INVENTION Appellant’s invention relates to a scalable and programmable power management integrated circuit. See Spec. ¶ 0001. Claim 1, which is illustrative of the invention, reads as follows: 1. An integrated circuit for scalable and programmable power management, the integrated circuit comprising: a master controller module; a communication network in operable communication with said master controller module; and a first slave module in operable communication with said communication network, said first slave module performing a power management or conversion function that is at least in part controlled by a control command communicated from said master controller module to said first slave module, said control command being communicated and received through said communication network, and said control command being decoded by said first slave module. THE REJECTIONS Claims 1-3, 6-10, and 16-19 stand rejected under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as unpatentable over Zhang (US 2006/0212138 A1; published Sept. 21, 2006; filed Mar. 17, 2006) and Applicant’s Admission of Prior Art (“AAPA”). See Ans. 3-8. Claim 5 stands rejected under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as unpatentable over Zhang, AAPA, and Mar (US 6,792,553 B2; issued Sept. 14, 2004). See Ans. 8. Appeal 2011-004126 Application 11/452,713 3 ISSUE The dispositive issue raised by Appellant’s contentions is whether Zhang teaches away from a master module and a slave module in the same integrated circuit. See App. Br. 6-7; Reply Br. 4-7. Appellant’s contentions raise additional issues. Because we are persuaded of Examiner error by the identified issue, which is dispositive of the appeal, we do not reach the additional issues. ANALYSIS REJECTION OF CLAIMS 1-3, 6-10, AND 16-19 UNDER 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) The Examiner finds that Zhang teaches a master controller module, a communication network in operable communication with the master controller module, and a first slave module in operable communication with the communication network, as recited in claim 1. See Ans. 3-4. However, the Examiner concedes that Zhang does not teach a single integrated circuit (“IC”) comprising these components. See Ans. 4. Rather, Zhang teaches plural ICs for its plural modules. See id. (citing Zhang, ¶ 0013). The Examiner points to Figure 1 of the Specification (Applicant’s Admission of Prior Art, or “AAPA”), as teaching plural slave power regulators and a master controller provided in a single IC. See Ans. 4. According to the Examiner, a person of ordinary skill in the art would have combined Zhang’s teachings with those of AAPA to arrive at the master and slave modules taught by Zhang in a single IC, “since this saves space and facilitates ease of design.” Id. Appellant contends that Zhang teaches away from putting a master module and slave modules in the same IC. See App. Br. 6-7. According to Appeal 2011-004126 Application 11/452,713 4 Appellant, Zhang teaches several benefits of a multi-IC solution that would not be realized by combining the plurality of modules onto a single IC, including: 1. Greater safety and reliability, because each slave IC is a stand-alone module that, once calibrated, can act independently for a time. If the master goes down, the slaves can continue to operate. See App. Br. 6 (citing Zhang, ¶ 0031); Reply Br. 6 (same); 2. Cost savings, because cheap analog circuits can be used for the slave ICs while an expensive mixed signal circuit can be limited to the master IC. See App. Br. 6 (citing Zhang, ¶ 0033). This way, expensive technology is only used for one component, while inexpensive technology is used for the rest. See Reply Br. 6 (citing Zhang, ¶ 0043). Good operational results can still be obtained because the expensive master can control the slaves to be more precise. See Reply Br. 5-6 (citing Zhang, ¶¶ 0027, 0031); and 3. Easier optimization, as the master IC and the slave ICs can be made using different IC processes, allowing each to be individually optimized. See App. Br. 6 (citing Zhang, ¶ 0047); Reply Br. 6-7 (same). According to the Federal Circuit: A reference may be said to teach away when a person of ordinary skill, upon reading the reference, would be discouraged from following the path set out in the reference, or would be led in a direction divergent from the path that was taken by the applicant. . . . [I]n general, a reference will teach away if it suggests that the line of development flowing from the reference’s disclosure is unlikely to be productive of the result sought by the applicant. In re Gurley, 27 F.3d 551, 553 (Fed. Cir. 1994). Appeal 2011-004126 Application 11/452,713 5 The Examiner responds that Zhang does not discourage a single-chip implementation, and provides no indication that it is at odds with a single- chip implementation. See Ans. 9. We agree with Appellant. As Appellant has shown, Zhang repeatedly states that its architecture includes multiple ICs and that such an implementation provides several benefits, including reliability and cost savings. See Zhang, ¶¶ 0013, 0031, 0033, 0043, 0044, 0047, 0048. The implication in Zhang is that a single-chip implementation would not yield those benefits. For example, Zhang teaches that cost savings can be realized by limiting expensive and more precise technology to the master IC while implementing the slave ICs with cheaper and less precise technology. See Zhang, ¶¶ 0027, 0031, 0033, 0043. This teaching suggests that if the master and the slaves are all incorporated in the same IC, the entire IC would have to be implemented using the more expensive technology in order to meet the precision requirements of the master. Similarly, the ability to individually optimize the master and slave ICs using different IC processes would be lost if all of those components were combined in the same IC. Such teachings would have led a person of ordinary skill in the art in a direction divergent from the single-IC solution taken by Appellant. The Examiner finds that the AAPA’s design is fixed and non-scalable because it has parallel connections, and that Zhang instead uses serial communication. See Ans. 10 (citing Spec. ¶ 6, Zhang, ¶¶ 0008, 0010). However, Appellant points out in reply that Zhang also teaches a parallel bus architecture for the address bus, limiting the number of slaves to 32. See Reply Br. 7 (citing Zhang, ¶ 0023). The Examiner further finds that a skilled artisan would have known that redoing the routing layer of an IC is Appeal 2011-004126 Application 11/452,713 6 easier than redoing the IC die layout. See Ans. 10 (citing Spec. ¶ 0036). However, the Examiner’s citation to the Specification is not to AAPA. Thus, the Examiner does not provide a factual basis for this finding. Accordingly, the Examiner erred in concluding that it would have been obvious to modify Zhang to incorporate its plural modules in a single IC per AAPA’s teaching. Independent claim 16 also recites an IC that comprises at least a power conversion device and a means for orchestrating the real-time behavior of the power conversion device. The Examiner rejects claim 16 for essentially the same reasons as claim 1. See Ans. 6-7; 9-10. For reasons similar to those for claim 1, the Examiner has not shown that putting both of these components on a single IC would have been obvious. Therefore, the Examiner’s conclusion of obviousness as to claim 16 is erroneous for the same reasons as claim 1. Accordingly, we do not sustain the rejection of (1) independent claims 1 and 16; (2) claims 2, 3, and 6-10, which depend on claim 1; and (3) claims 17-19, which depend on claim 16. REJECTION OF CLAIM 5 UNDER 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) Claim 5 depends on claim 1. Thus, it includes a recitation of subject matter we find not taught by the cited prior art. The Examiner does not rely on Mar to cure the above-noted deficiency of Zhang and AAPA. Accordingly, we do not sustain the rejection of claim 5. Appeal 2011-004126 Application 11/452,713 7 ORDER The decision of the Examiner to reject claims 1-3, 5-10, and 16-19 is reversed. REVERSED kis Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation