Ex Parte Shiao et alDownload PDFPatent Trial and Appeal BoardNov 1, 201712885757 (P.T.A.B. Nov. 1, 2017) 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. 12/885,757 09/20/2010 Ming Liang Shiao 2009-138 9308 27569 7590 PAUL AND PAUL 1717 Arch Street Three Logan Square SUITE 3740 PHILADELPHIA, PA 19103 EXAMINER TRINH, THANH TRUC ART UNIT PAPER NUMBER 1756 NOTIFICATION DATE DELIVERY MODE 11/03/2017 ELECTRONIC 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. Notice of the Office communication was sent electronically on above-indicated "Notification Date" to the following e-mail address(es): INFO @PAUL ANDPAUL.COM claire @paulandpaul.com fpanna@paulandpaul.com PTOL-90A (Rev. 04/07) UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE BEFORE THE PATENT TRIAL AND APPEAL BOARD Ex parte MING LIANG SHIAO, GREGORY F. JACOBS, and JOSEPH C. GOMBARICK JR. Appeal 2016-001576 Application 12/885,757 Technology Center 1700 Before KAREN M. HASTINGS, JENNIFER R. GUPTA, and JANE E. INGLESE, Administrative Patent Judges. INGLESE, Administrative Patent Judge. DECISION ON REQUEST FOR REHEARING Appellants request rehearing of our Decision mailed August 11, 2017 (“Dec.”), affirming the Examiner’s rejections of claims 11-19, 26-39, 41, and 42 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a). Request for Rehearing filed October 9, 2017 (“Req. Reh.”), 1. We deny Appellants’ request to change our Decision for the following reasons. Rejections II, VII, and VIII Appellants contend that the “closest thing to supporting reasoning the Board provides for sustaining the Examiner’s rejections 111, VII, and VII is” the following statement in our Decision: Appeal 2016-001576 Application 12/885,757 Banister’s disclosure of using thermo voltaic elements—defined to include thermopiles—in roofing applications reasonably would have suggested to one of ordinary skill in the art that Beerwerth’s thermopile having hot junctions covered with an absorptive layer and cold junctions covered with a heat reflective layer, could be connected with other such thermopiles to form a thermoelectric power generator as disclosed by Gomez, in order to successfully generate electric power from sunlight in roofing applications. Req. Reh. 2 (citing Dec. 10-11). Appellants argue, in reference to this statement, that “[t]he Board assumes without basis in the evidence of record that all thermoelectric devices are functionally equivalent and interchangeable. The evidence of record suggests the opposite; namely, that all thermoelectric device types are not suitable for the same tasks.” Req. Reh. 2. However, contrary to Appellants’ arguments, our Decision does not assume “that all thermoelectric devices are functionally equivalent and interchangeable.” Dec. 7-11. Rather, as our Decision indicates, Gomez’s explicit disclosure of the suitability of using a plurality of connected thermopiles to generate electric power from solar energy reasonably would have suggested to one of ordinary skill in the art that a thermopile as disclosed in Beerwerth could be connected to other such thermopiles to successfully generate electric power from solar energy. Dec. 8. In addition, as our Decision also indicates, Banister’s disclosure of using tiles containing thermovoltaic elements in roofing applications, and broad definition of “thermovoltaic” as “encompassing all known materials that convert heat into electricity,” reasonably would have suggested to one of ordinary skill in the art that Beerwerth’s thermopile connected to other such thermopiles as suggested by Gomez could be used in roofing applications to convert heat 2 Appeal 2016-001576 Application 12/885,757 into electricity. Dec. 10-11; Banister 2, 20, 39, 40, 47, and 48. In other words, because Banister defines “thermovoltaic elements” to encompass “all known materials that convert heat into electricity,” one of ordinary skill in the art would have considered the thermopiles disclosed in Gomez that generate electric power from solar energy to be “thermovoltaic elements” as disclosed in Banister. Dec. 10-11. Accordingly, as set forth in our Decision, Banister’s disclosure of using thermovoltaic elements—explicitly defined to encompass thermopiles—in roofing applications, reasonably would have suggested to one of ordinary skill in the art that Beerwerth’s thermopile could be connected with other such thermopiles to form a thermoelectric power generator as disclosed by Gomez, in order to successfully generate electric power from sunlight in roofing applications. Dec. 7, 8, and 10-11. Although Appellants assert that the “evidence of record” suggests that all thermoelectric device types are not suitable for the same tasks, the suitability of all thermoelectric device for the same tasks is not germane to the present appeal. Req. Reh. 2. Rather, the relevant inquiry in the present appeal is whether the evidence relied upon by the Examiner would have suggested to one of ordinary skill in the art that a thermopile as disclosed in Beerwerth could be connected with other such thermopiles to form a thermoelectric power generator, as disclosed in Gomez, to successfully generate electric power from sunlight in roofing applications, as disclosed in Banister. Rather than identifying any “evidence of record” indicating otherwise, Appellants present a series of (apparently rhetorical) questions and assert that if “electricity” means usable electric power, the thermocouples disclosed in Beerwerth would not be considered devices for 3 Appeal 2016-001576 Application 12/885,757 converting heat into electricity because Beerwerth teaches their use for temperature measurement or motion detection. Req. Reh. 2. Appellants further assert that “none of the prior art teaches the use of the thermocouples as used in Beerwerth for electric power generation.” Id. However, as our Decision indicates, Gomez explicitly discloses using a plurality of connected thermopiles to generate electric power from solar energy. Dec. 9 (citing Gomez col. 1,1. 58-col. 2,1. 2; col. 2,11. 56-56; col. 3,11. 26-28; Fig. 1.) Appellants’ arguments ignore this disclosure in Gomez, and therefore do not take into consideration what the combined disclosures of the entirety of the applied prior art would have suggested to one of ordinary skill in the art at the time of the invention (discussed above). Appellants further argue that “Banister teaches thermovoltaic devices based on GaAs, GaSb, and InGaAs have resulted in dramatic efficiency gains over other types (Banister, [0005]),” and Appellants contend that one of ordinary skill in the art “would have no reason to negate the efficiency gains of the thermovoltaic devices of Banister by replacing them with the silicon based devices of Beerwerth.” Req. Reh. 3. Appellants contend that the Board has failed to explain why one of ordinary skill in the art would make such a combination. Id. However, Appellants did not raise this argument in their Appeal and Reply Briefs, and we therefore do not consider it. 37 C.F.R. § 41.52(a)(1) (arguments not raised, and evidence not previously relied upon, in Appeal and Reply Briefs are not permitted in a request for rehearing, with limited exceptions). Nonetheless, we do point out that, as discussed in our Decision, the combination proposed by the Examiner does not involve replacing 4 Appeal 2016-001576 Application 12/885,757 thermovoltaic elements disclosed in Banister with the thermocouple disclosed in Beerwerth. Dec. 7. Appellants further argue that we incorrectly interpret Beerwerth’s disclosure regarding amplifiers. Req. Reh. 3. Appellants argue that Beerwerth does not imply that amplifiers are not required, but indicates that the amplifiers may optionally be provided on the frame of the sensor rather than on a separate circuit board or other support. Id. However, the disclosure in Beerwerth that Appellants refer to reads in its entirety: The thermocouples are made of polysilicon/aluminum or p- polysilicon/n-polysilicon, for example. The frame 2 is preferably made of silicon. It may therefore serve as substrate for electronic components; for instance, amplifiers for amplifying the signal output from the thermopile may be provided on the frame. Because these amplifiers produce a certain waste heat, they are positioned symmetrically to the thermopile on the frame, thereby preventing them from causing heat gradients in the thermopile. Beerwerth col. 4,11. 19-29. The only other disclosure in Beerwerth regarding amplifiers is in claim 6, which recites that “the frame (2) is substantially made of silicon, and that electronic circuits, in particular amplifiers, are disposed on the frame (2).” As our Decision indicates, one of ordinary skill in the art would have understood the above disclosures in Beerwerth to indicate that amplifiers are not required for use with Beerwerth’s thermopile, but may optionally be included on the thermopile’s frame. Dec. 8-9. That is, one of ordinary skill in the art would have understood Beerwerth to indicate that amplifiers need not be used with the thermopile disclosed in the reference, but if amplifiers are used, they should be positioned on the frame. Only the single paragraph 5 Appeal 2016-001576 Application 12/885,757 of Beerwerth quoted above discusses amplifiers, and the remainder of Beerwerth’s disclosures, with the exception of claim 6, make no mention of amplifiers. Beerwerth’s failure to discuss amplifiers in all of the general disclosures provided in the reference, in all of the drawings, and in all of the specifically described embodiments of Beerwerth’s invention, save one, further supports the interpretation of Beerwerth’s disclosures as indicating that amplifiers are not required for use with the thermopile described in the reference. Rejection IV Appellants argue that the following statement in our Decision constitutes legal error: “claims 11-13 [sic: 13-15] do not recite any function for the E* value differences required by the claims; consequently, the recited E* value differences do not patentably distinguish the claimed roofing product from the product suggested by the combined disclosures of the applied prior art.” Req. Reh. 4. Appellants contend that “it is axiomatic that claims are interpreted in light of the specification, and, in light of the specification, one of ordinary skill would understand that the claimed E* value differences function to increase the temperature gradient available for thermal electric power generation.”1 Id. However, Appellants’ Specification defines the strength in color space (E*) as “E* = (L*2 + a*2 + b*2)1/2, where L*, a*, and b* are the color measurements for a given sample using the 1976 CIE L*a*b* color space.” 1 Appellants include another paragraph in their discussion of Rejection IV, but the statements in this paragraph do not “state with particularity the points believed to have been misapprehended or overlooked by the Board” as required by 37 C.F.R. § 41.52(a)(1). Req. Reh. 3—4. We accordingly do not address these statements. 6 Appeal 2016-001576 Application 12/885,757 Spec. 8,11. 12-14. Appellants’ Specification further states that the “total color difference AE* is defined as AE* = (AL*2 + Aa*2 + Ab*2)/2 where AL*2, Aa*2, and Ab*2 are respectively the differences in L*, a* and b* for two different color measurements.” Spec. 8,11. 14-16. Appellants’ Specification also states that “[sjhingles may be coated with mixtures of granules having different colors. In order to achieve a similar appearance, areas having an enhanced solar heat reflectance preferably differ in color space strength (E*) from solar heat absorptive areas by no more than 10, more preferably by no more than 5, and still more preferably by no more than 2.” Spec. 8,11. 26-30 (emphasis added). Appellants’ Specification does not include any further description of color space strength (E*), other than reciting the language included in claims 13-15. Spec. 4,11. 3-6, 25-27. In view of these disclosures in Appellants’ Specification, considered in the context of the Specification as a whole, one of ordinary skill in the art would have understood that the purpose of the color space strength (E*) difference recited in claims 13-15 is to achieve a similar appearance. Although Appellants assert that the E* value differences recited in claims 13-15 “function to increase the temperature gradient available for thermal electric power generation,” Appellants’ Specification discloses that areas of different solar reflectivity—rather than areas of different color space strength (E*)—function to generate temperature differences for power generation. Spec. 13,11. 1-11. Therefore, contrary to Appellants’ argument, the statement in our Decision that claims 13-15 do not recite any function for the recited E* value differences does not constitute legal error. As our Decision also indicates, matters of ornamentation having no mechanical function—such as the color space strength (E*) differences 7 Appeal 2016-001576 Application 12/885,757 recited in claims 13-15 whose purpose is to achieve a similar appearance— do not patentably distinguish the claimed roofing product from the product suggested by the combined disclosures of the applied prior art. Dec. 12 (citing In re Seid, 161 F.2d 229, 231 (CCPA 1947), In re Kuhle, 526 F.2d 553, 555 (CCPA 1975)). Rejections VI and IX Appellants again impermissibly present an argument that they did not raise in their Appeal and Reply Briefs, and we therefore do not consider this new argument. Req. Reh. 4-5; 37 C.F.R. § 41.52(a)(1) (arguments not raised, and evidence not previously relied upon, in Appeal and Reply Briefs are not permitted in a request for rehearing, with limited exceptions). CONCLUSION In conclusion, based on the foregoing, we grant Appellants’ Request for Rehearing to the extent that we have reconsidered our Decision, but we deny Appellants’ request to make any change therein. No time period for taking any subsequent action in connection with this appeal may be extended under 37 C.F.R. § 1.136(a)(l)(iv). DENIED 8 Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation