Ex Parte Persky et alDownload PDFPatent Trial and Appeal BoardOct 31, 201211443796 (P.T.A.B. Oct. 31, 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. 11/443,796 05/30/2006 Joshua Persky PA-085.11482-US (05-366) 5054 52237 7590 10/31/2012 BACHMAN & LAPOINTE, P.C. c/o CPA Global P.O. Box 52050 Minneapolis, MN 55402 EXAMINER KATZ, VERA ART UNIT PAPER NUMBER 1784 MAIL DATE DELIVERY MODE 10/31/2012 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 PATENT TRIAL AND APPEALS BOARD ____________ Ex parte JOSHUA PERSKY, DAVID A. LITTON, and DAVID L. LAMBERT __________ Appeal 2011-004261 Application 11/443,796 Technology Center 1700 ____________ Before ADRIENE LEPIANE HANLON, KAREN M. HASTINGS, and MICHAEL P. COLAIANNI, Administrative Patent Judges. COLAIANNI, Administrative Patent Judge. DECISION ON APPEAL Appeal 2011-004261 Application 11/443,796 2 Appellants appeal under 35 U.S.C. § 134 from the final rejection of claims 26-30, and 32-45. We have jurisdiction over the appeal pursuant to 35 U.S.C. § 6(b). We AFFIRM-IN-PART and DISMISS-IN-PART. Appellants’ invention is directed to an erosion barrier for thermal barrier coatings on turbine engine parts (Spec. 1). Claim 26 is illustrative: 26. A workpiece comprising: a substrate formed from a nickel base superalloy; a thermal barrier coating deposited on and in direct contact with said substrate; said thermal barrier coating being formed from a zirconia based material; and a hard erosion barrier deposited over said thermal barrier coating, said hard erosion barrier having a Vickers hardness in the range of from 1300 to 2750 kg/mm2 and being formed from a different material than said zirconia based material. Appellants appeal the following rejections: 1. Claims 26, 27, and 36-39 are rejected under 35 U.S.C. §102(e) as being unpatentable over Nagaraj (US 2007/0104969 A1 published May 10, 2007) as evidenced by the CRC Handbook (JAMES F. SHACKELFORD & WILLIAM ALEXANDER, CRC MATERIALS SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING HANDBOOK 1 (CRC Press, 3d ed. 2001)). 2. Claims 28 and 29 are rejected under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as being unpatentable over Nagaraj in view of Krishamurthy (US 2007/0099027 A1 published May 3, 2007). Appeal 2011-004261 Application 11/443,796 3 3. Claim 30 is rejected under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as being unpatentable over Nagaraj in view of Beals (US 2009/0114797 A1 published May 7, 2009) or Maloney (US 5,308,806 issued May 3, 1994). 4. Claims 32, 34, and 35 are rejected under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as being unpatentable over Nagaraj in view of Ackerman (US 2005/0048305 A1 published Mar. 3, 2005). 5. Claims 40-45 are rejected under 35 U.S.C. §103(a) as being unpatentable over Nagaraj in view of Darolia (US 2005/0112398 A1 published May 26, 2005). REJECTIONS (1) AND (5) Rejections (1) and (5) were modified by the Examiner in the Answer by adding the CRC handbook reference and the Darolia reference to the rejections, respectively (Ans. 3, 5-6, and 10). The Examiner indicated the modified rejections were new grounds of rejections1 (id. at 3, 5-6, 10, 18). Page 18 of the Answer quotes 37 CFR § 41.39(b) which states that in reply to a new grounds of rejection in an Answer Appellants must within two months file either a request to reopen prosecution or file a reply brief to maintain the appeal with regard to the claims under the new grounds of rejection (id. at 18-19). Appellants have not complied with this requirement as no request to reopen prosecution or reply brief has been filed. As indicated in § 41.39(b), failure to file a request to reopen prosecution or a 1 Rejections (2), (3), and (4) do not include the CRC Handbook reference or Darolia as part of the statement of rejection. Accordingly, unlike rejections (1) and (5), we understand rejections (2), (3) and (4) as not being new grounds of rejection. Appeal 2011-004261 Application 11/443,796 4 reply brief will result in sua sponte dismissal of the appeal as to the claims subject to the new ground of rejection. On this record and for the above reasons, we sua sponte dismiss the appeal as to claims 26, 27, 36-39, and 40-45 subject to new grounds of rejection. REJECTION (2): Dependent Claims 28 and 29 Appellants argue the subject matter of claims 28 and 29 (App. Br. 9- 11). Appellants argue that Krishnamurthy does not disclose a silicon nitride or silicon carbide layer having the claimed Vickers hardness (id. at 10). Appellants contend that there is no reason to combine Krishnamurthy’s antifriction wear coating with Nagaraj’s turbine blade because the antifriction wear coating has nothing to do with Nagaraj’s coating. Id. Appellants contend that the Examiner’s reason for combining lacks any rational underpinning because one of ordinary skill in the art would not have substituted Krishnamurthy’s layer designed to prevent friction on a bushing or trunnion for the corrosion resistant layer of Nagaraj on a airfoil portion of a turbine (id. at 11). Appellants contend that the Examiner’s reliance on In re Best, 195 USPQ 430 (CCPA 1977) is misplaced because the Examiner has not established that structures set forth in the secondary references are identical or substantially identical (App. Br. 10). The Examiner responds that Krishnamurthy teaches that silicon carbide, silicon nitride, and alumina are interchangeable with one another (Ans. 13). The Examiner finds that Krishnamurthy discloses that the silicon carbide and silicon nitride layers possess high temperature stability and Appeal 2011-004261 Application 11/443,796 5 minimize wear loss or improve wear resistance, good toughness and strength (id.). The Examiner finds that Nagaraj seeks to reduce spalling which Krishnamurthy’s wear resistant coatings would have helped to reduce. Id. The Examiner finds that Krishnamurthy discloses a Vickers hardness range that overlaps the hardness range recited in the claims (id. at 14). In light of the overlap in hardness between the prior art and the claims, the Examiner finds that the claimed workpiece having a SiC or SiN coating with the recited Vickers hardness would have been obvious over the combined teachings of Nagaraj’s coating as modified by Krishnamurthy (id.). The preponderance of the evidence favors the Examiner’s conclusion of obviousness. We note that Appellants do not contest the Examiner’s finding that Krishnamurthy teaches the silicon nitride, silicon carbide and alumina are interchangeable or that Nagaraj’s teaching to provide a coating suitable for avoiding spalling would have suggested the combination of Krishnamurthy’s coating with Nagaraj’s coating. Krishnamurthy and Nagaraj are both directed to providing protective coating on turbine parts. Accordingly, for the uncontested reasons provided by the Examiner, we agree that the combined teachings of Nagaraj and Krishnamurthy would have suggested using Krishnamurthy’s coatings on Nagaraj’s turbine as a wear resistant coating. We do not agree with Appellants that the Examiner’s reliance on In re Best is misplaced because once Krishnamurthy’s silicon nitride or silicon carbide are substituted for Nagaraj’s alumina coating for the reasons provided by the Examiner, it is reasonable to presume that the identical structure would have the same Vickers hardness absent evidence to the contrary. Appellants have provided no such evidence as is their burden to do. Appeal 2011-004261 Application 11/443,796 6 The overlap of the hardness ranges disclosed by Krishnamurthy and the claimed ranges would have established prima facie obviousness. In re Peterson, 315 F.3d 1325, 1329 (Fed. Cir. 2003) (“A prima facie case of obviousness typically exists when the ranges of a claimed composition overlap the ranges disclosed in the prior art.â€). On this record, we affirm the Examiner’s § 103 rejection of claims 28 and 29. REJECTION (3): Claim 30 Regarding the combination of Nagaraj and Beals, Appellants argue that there is no reason to combine Beals’ MbSi2 coating for refractory metals with Nagaraj’s coating for turbine blades having no refractory metal (App. Br. 12-13). However, Appellants do not contest the Examiner’s finding that Nagaraj’s nickel superalloy contains refractory elements and thus may be considered analogous to refractory metals (Ans. 15). In light of the Examiner’s uncontested finding, the preponderance of the evidence favors the Examiner’s conclusion that there would have been a reason to combine Beals’ MbSi2 coating for refractory metals with Nagaraj’s refractory metal material. Regarding the combination of Nagaraj and Maloney, Appellants argue that there is no good reason to replace the corrosion resistant layer in Nagaraj with the molybdenum disilicide structural material disclosed in Maloney (App. Br. 15). We agree. The Examiner does not respond specifically to Appellants’ argument that Maloney teaches a structural material used to make sensors, kiln parts, Appeal 2011-004261 Application 11/443,796 7 or other structural elements. The Examiner reasons that substituting Maloney’s molybdenum disilicide material for Nagaraj’s coating would have been obvious to produce a layer with excellent high temperature oxidation resistance and high thermal conductivity (Ans. 9-10). However, the Examiner does not explain why one of ordinary skill would have looked to Maloney’s structural material as a substitute for a coating layer on Nagaraj’s turbine part. We fail to see any credible reason for such a combination. On this record, we affirm the Examiner’s § 103 rejection over Nagaraj in view of Beals and we reverse the § 103 rejection over Nagaraj in view of Maloney. REJECTION (4): Claims 32, 34, and 35 Appellants argue that sealant layer 120 in Ackerman is not an infiltration region between the thermal barrier coating and the erosion barrier (App. Br. 13-14). Appellants contend that sealant layer 120 does not infiltrate any layer (id. at 14). The Examiner responds that Appellants have not defined “infiltration region†in the Specification and paragraph 30 of the Specification merely describes the thickness of the materials in the infiltration region (Ans. 16). The Examiner reasons that Ackerman teaches layer 120 is formed by sol-gel infiltration and seals microcracks which is considered to infiltrate into the thermal barrier layer. Id. The preponderance of the evidence favors Appellants’ argument of nonobviousness. Paragraph 30 of the Specification describes the thickness of the infiltration region between the erosion barrier and the thermal barrier Appeal 2011-004261 Application 11/443,796 8 coating as “measured down from the surface of the TBC [thermal barrier coating].†We understand such disclosure to indicate that the erosion barrier infiltrates into the thermal barrier layer to form an infiltration region. Our interpretation is supported by the fact that thickness of the infiltration region is measured from the surface of the thermal barrier coating. Therefore, with this proper construction of infiltration region in mind, we cannot agree that Ackerman’s sealant 120 constitutes an infiltration region. Sealant 120 is a distinct, separate coating from any thermal barrier coating such that it cannot be said that sealant 120 constitutes an infiltration region whose thickness is measured relative to the layer into which the sealant has infiltrated. On this record, we reverse the Examiner’s § 103 rejection of claims 32, 34 and 35 over Nagaraj in view of Ackerman. DECISION We sua sponte dismiss the appeal with regard to claims 26, 27, 36-39, and 40-45 subject to new grounds of rejection, which were not responded to by Appellants in accordance with 37 CFR § 41.39 (b). The Examiner’s decision with regard to claims 28-30 is affirmed. The Examiner’s decision with regard to claims 32, 34, and 35 is reversed. No time period for taking any subsequent action in connection with this appeal may be extended under 37 C.F.R. § 1.136. ORDER AFFIRMED-IN-PART & DISMISSED-IN-PART bar Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation