Ex Parte SishtlaDownload PDFPatent Trial and Appeal BoardJan 25, 201812933729 (P.T.A.B. Jan. 25, 2018) 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. 12/933,729 09/21/2010 Vishnu M. Sishtla PA-057.10955-US-AA 1208 87059 7590 01/29/2018 Cantor Colburn LLP - Carrier 20 Church Street, 22nd Floor Hartford, CT 06103 EXAMINER TANENBAUM, TZVI SAMUEL ART UNIT PAPER NUMBER 3744 NOTIFICATION DATE DELIVERY MODE 01/29/2018 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): usptopatentmail@cantorcolbum.com PTOL-90A (Rev. 04/07) UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE BEFORE THE PATENT TRIAL AND APPEAL BOARD Ex parte VISHNU M. SISHTLA Appeal 2017-003845 Application 12/933,7291 Technology Center 3700 Before: STEFAN STAICOVICI, JILL D. HILL, and ARTHUR M. PESLAK, Administrative Patent Judges. STAICOVICI, Administrative Patent Judge. DECISION ON APPEAL STATEMENT OF THE CASE Vishnu M. Sishtla (Appellant) appeals under 35 U.S.C. § 134(a) from the Examiner’s decision in the Final Action (dated Dec. 10, 2015, hereinafter “Final Act.”) rejecting claims 1, 4, and 5 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as unpatentable over Miller, Jr. (US 6,443,711 Bl, iss. Sept. 3, 2002, hereinafter “Miller”), Bush et al. (US 6,826,926 B2, iss. Dec. 7, 2004, 1 According to Appellant’s Appeal Brief (filed July 7, 2016, hereinafter “Br.”), the real party in interest is Carrier Corporation. Br. 2. Appeal 2017-003845 Application 12/933,729 hereainafter “Bush”), and Schulze (US 2,967,410, iss. Jan. 10, 1961).2,3 We have jurisdiction under 35 U.S.C. § 6(b). SUMMARY OF DECISION We AFFIRM. CLAIMED SUBJECT MATTER Appellant’s invention relates to “noise suppression in screw compressors used in commercial and industrial air conditioning and refrigeration systems.” Spec. 1,11. 5—7. Sole independent claim 1 is representative and reads as follows: 1. A screw compressor for use in a chiller assembly, the compressor comprising: a plurality of cooperating screw rotors disposed at a compressor housing configured to increase the pressure of a vaporized refrigerant flowing through the compressor; a motor to drive rotation of at least one screw rotor of the plurality of screw rotors disposed fluidly upstream of the plurality of screw rotors; a bearing housing disposed fluidly downstream of the screw rotors, and including screw bearings configured to facilitate rotation of the screw rotors; a first venturi tube arranged in a first flow path of the refrigerant in the bearing housing fluidly downstream of the screw rotors configured to cause a pressure drop in the refrigerant; and 2 Upon entering Appellant’s Amendment After-Final Action, filed March 9, 2016, the Examiner’s rejection of claims 1, 4, and 5 under 35 U.S.C. § 112, second paragraph, as being indefinite, has been rendered moot, and, hence, is not part of the instant appeal. See Adv. Act. 17 (dated Apr. 15, 2016); see also Final Act. 2. 3 Claims 2, 3, and 6—20 are withdrawn. Br. 2. 2 Appeal 2017-003845 Application 12/933,729 a first inlet port at a throat of the first venturi tube and configured to deliver liquid refrigerant from a condenser of the chiller assembly to the flow path of the refrigerant in the compressor and configured to reduce pulsations in the pressure of the refrigerant discharged from the compressor, the pressure drop in the refrigerant at the first venturi tube resulting in delivery of the liquid refrigerant through the first inlet port. ANALYSIS Appellant has not presented arguments for the patentability of claims 4 and 5 apart from claim 1. See Br. 5. Therefore, in accordance with 37 C.F.R. § 41.37(c)(l)(iv), we select claim 1 as the representative claim to decide the appeal of the rejection of these claims, with claims 4 and 5 standing or falling with claim 1. The Examiner finds that Miller discloses screw compressor 10 including inter alia, screw rotors 20-22 for increasing the pressure of a vaporized refrigerant that flows through the compressor, motor 40 for driving at least one of the screw rotors, and bearing housing 12 having screw bearings 36—38. Final Act. 4 (citing to Miller, Fig. 1). The Examiner further finds that Miller fails to disclose that “screw compressor 10 is for use in a chiller assembly.'1'’ Id. Nonetheless, the Examiner finds that Bush discloses the use of screw compressor 12 in a chiller assembly. Id. (citing Bush, col. 2,1. 65). Accordingly, the Examiner concludes that it would have been obvious to a person of ordinary skill in the art to modify Miller to use a chiller, as taught by Bush, in order “to remove heat from a liquid (e.g. water) which can then be circulated through a heat exchanger to cool air or equipment as required and thereby cool air or equipment without piping refrigerant over distances.” Id. at 4—5 (citing Bush, col. 2,11. 64—66). 3 Appeal 2017-003845 Application 12/933,729 The Examiner further notes that Miller’s screw compressor, as modified by Bush, does not disclose a venturi tube and an inlet port at a throat of the venturi tube as further required by independent claim 1. Id. at 5. Nonetheless, the Examiner then finds that Schulze discloses (1) venturi tube 26a located in the first flow path of a refrigerant that causes a pressure drop in the refrigerant and (2) inlet port 40 at throat 29a of venturi tube 26a that delivers liquid refrigerant to the compressor. Id. (citing Schulze, Figs. 1, 2). The Examiner, thus, concludes that because “Bush teaches that, in general, injecting liquid refrigerant into a compression cycle at a compressor reduces pulsations,” a person of ordinary skill in the art would have modified Miller to include Schulze’s venturi tube and inlet port arrangement, “to reduc[e] pressure pulsations and associated radial noise produced during a compression cycle through the injection of liquid refrigerant into the compression cycle,” as taught by Bush, “while automatically modulating the liquid refrigerant flow from the condenser according to the quantity of refrigerant flowing through the first flow path from a compressor unit,” as taught by Schulze. Id. at 6—7 (citing Bush, Abstract, col. 1,11. 5—11 and 55— 60, col. 3,11. 25—33 and 45—55; Schulze, col. 2,11. 14—19). Appellant argues that, in contrast to independent claim 1, which requires delivering liquid refrigerant in the compressor at a bearing housing downstream of the rotors, in Bush’s system, liquid refrigerant is delivered either at a location outside the compressor, namely, at discharge port 24 or suction port 23, or at a point “along the compression cycle.” Br. 4. Appellant explains that Bush’s disclosure of “along the compression cycle” means that “compression is still occurring, and thus the injection is not downstream of the rotors but at some point along the rotors and not at a 4 Appeal 2017-003845 Application 12/933,729 bearing housing downstream of the rotors.” Id. Appellant further asserts that Schulze’s element 9, cited by the Examiner as a bearing housing, is described in Schulze as a “main frame,” and as “[n]o bearings are indicated in the main frame 9,” Schulze provides “no indication that it is in fact a bearing housing.” Id. Thus, according to Appellant, the combined teachings of Miller, Bush, and Schulze fail to disclose or suggest “‘a first venturi tube arranged in a first flowpath of the refrigerant in the bearing housing fluidly downstream of the screw rotors’ as required by claim 1.” Id. (underlining omitted). The Examiner responds that Schulze’s frame 9 constitutes a “bearing housing” as broadly claimed because “frame 9 impliedly houses a bearing for the rotation of. . . shaft 12 of motor 11.” Examiner’s Answer 2 (dated Oct. 24, 2016, hereinafter “Ans.”). Moreover, even though Schulze’s frame 9 may not constitute a “bearing housing,” nonetheless, according to the Examiner, because Schulze’s venturi tube is “immediately downstream of a compressor housing [8] . . . one of ordinary skill in the art would understand to locate the venturi tube of Schulze within the bearing housing 12 of Miller as the bearing housing 12 is located immediately downstream of compressor housing 13.” Id. at 2—3. We are not persuaded by Appellant’s arguments because such arguments are not commensurate with the Examiner’s rejection. The Examiner did not rely on the injection location in Bush’s system as being downstream of the rotors. See Final Act. 5. Rather, the Examiner relies on Schulze as teaching a venturi tube located “‘immediately downstream’ of a compressor housing where refrigerant is compressed.” Ans. 2. Specifically, Schulze discloses that refrigerant gas is “discharged by the compressor 5 Appeal 2017-003845 Application 12/933,729 through a suitable discharge passage leading directly into the hermetic casing. The discharge passage includes the discharge port 14 of the compressor unit which directs the high pressure discharge gas into an aspirating means [venturi 26a].” Schulze, col. 3,11. 8—15 and 47; see also Final Act. 7. The Examiner then modifies Miller’s system to place a venturi tube, as taught by Schulze, immediately downstream of Miller’s compressor housing 13. See Ans. 2—3. Miller discloses that “[bjearings 36, 37 and 38 are received in and supported by outlet casing 12 [bearing housing] which defines flow paths (not illustrated) between the discharge of coacting pairs of rotors and the compressor discharge chamber 11-2 formed in discharge cover 11.” Miller, col. 3,11. 27—31, Fig. 1; see also Final Act. 4. Appellant does not adequately explain why a person of ordinary skill in the art would not discern from Schultze’s teaching of placing a venturi tube “immediately downstream” of a compressor discharge to place a venturi tube in Miller’s bearing housing. See Ans. 3. Appellant has not persuasively shown error in the Examiner’s findings or reasoning in combining the teachings of Schulze and Miller. Appellant further argues that because Bush uses a booster pump for increasing the pressure of the liquid refrigerant flow, which is “fundamentally different from the operation of Appellant’s claim 1 and of the Schulze reference” because a low pressure zone is created in the compressor via a venture tube, a person of “ordinary skill[] in the art would not combine the teachings of Bush with those of Schulze.” Br. 4—5 (citing Bush, col. 3,1. 38). We do not agree with Appellant’s contention because it is not commensurate with the Examiner’s rejection. The Examiner acknowledges 6 Appeal 2017-003845 Application 12/933,729 that Bush discloses using “a booster pump, or other device” to provide a “sufficiently high source of liquid refrigerant,” but correctly notes that Bush also discloses that liquid refrigerant can be introduced at any “point in the compression process where the pressure is reasonably . . . below that in condenser outlet 28.” Ans. 3^4 (citing Bush, col. 3,11. 18—25 and 34^40). We agree with the Examiner that Bush broadly relates to reducing noise by injecting liquid refrigerant into a compression cycle and is not limited to doing so by using a booster pump. See Ans. 3. Furthermore, given that Schulze’s venturi tube creates a region of low pressure in the throat zone so that liquid refrigerant [from the condenser] can enter the throat zone (see Schulze, col. 3,11. 36—39; see also Final Act. 5), Appellant does not adequately explain why Bush’s teachings of introducing liquid refrigerant from the condenser to a low pressure point are fundamentally different from those of Schulze. As Appellant provides no persuasive evidence or technical explanation as to why the combined teachings of the references as proposed by the Examiner do not meet the claims, we are not apprised of Examiner error. In conclusion, for the foregoing reasons, we sustain the rejection of independent claim 1 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as unpatentable over Miller, Bush, and Schulze. Claims 4 and 5 fall with claim 1. SUMMARY The Examiner’s decision rejecting claims 1, 4, and 5 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as unpatentable over Miller, Bush, and Schulze is affirmed. 7 Appeal 2017-003845 Application 12/933,729 No time period for taking any subsequent action in connection with this appeal may be extended under 37 C.F.R. § 1.136(a). See 37 C.F.R. § 1.136(a)(l)(iv). AFFIRMED 8 Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation