Ex Parte Van de Vijver et alDownload PDFPatent Trial and Appeal BoardAug 5, 201612745344 (P.T.A.B. Aug. 5, 2016) Copy Citation UNITED STA TES p A TENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE APPLICATION NO. FILING DATE 121745,344 05/28/2010 909 7590 08/09/2016 Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pittman, LLP (NV) PO Box 10500 McLean, VA 22102 FIRST NAMED INVENTOR Yuri Johannes Gabriel Van de Vijver 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 ATTORNEY DOCKET NO. CONFIRMATION NO. 081468-0385753 9475 EXAMINER WHITESELL GORDON, STEVEN H ART UNIT PAPER NUMBER 2882 NOTIFICATION DATE DELIVERY MODE 08/09/2016 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): docket_ip@pillsburylaw.com heather.marthers@pillsburylaw.com PTOL-90A (Rev. 04/07) UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE BEFORE THE PATENT TRIAL AND APPEAL BOARD Ex parte YURI JOHANNES GABRIEL VAN DE VIJVER, JOHANNES HUBERTUS JOSEPHINA MOORS, WENDELIN JOHANNA MARIA VERSTEEG, and PETER GERADUS JONKERS Appeal2015-000778 Application 12/745,3441 Technology Center 2800 Before ADRIENE LEPIANE HANLON, CATHERINE Q. TIMM, and JAMES C. HOUSEL, Administrative Patent Judges. PERCURIAM. DECISION ON APPEAL A. STATEMENT OF THE CASE Appellants filed an appeal under 35 U.S.C. § 134(a) from the Examiner's decision finally rejecting claims 1, 3-12, and 14. We have jurisdiction under 35 U.S.C. § 6(b).2 1 According to Appellants, the real party in interest is ASML Netherlands B.V. Br. 2. 2 Our decision refers to the Appellants' Specification filed May 28, 2010 (Spec.), the Final Office Action mailed Dec. 27, 2013 (Final Act.), the Appeal Brief filed June 13, 2014 (Appeal Br.), the Examiner's Answer mailed Aug. 12, 2014 (Ans.), and the Reply Brief filed Oct. 10, 2014 (Reply Br.). Appeal2015-000778 Application 12/745,344 We AFFIRM. STATEMENT OF THE CASE The subject matter on appeal relates to lithographic apparatuses and methods of ensuring continuous and hygienic operation of a mixing apparatus (see, e.g., claims 1 and 7). Appellants disclose that vacuum chambers of lithography systems can be contaminated with particles, which may damage an optical element (e.g., a mirror) or influence the optical transmittance of a projected beam. Spec. i-f 4. In view of this, Appellants disclose a lithographic apparatus that suppresses contamination particles in a vacuum chamber. Spec i-f 6. The lithographic apparatus includes a purge system configured to provide a purge gas flow in a vacuum chamber so the number of contamination particles in a region where a projected beam traverses a chamber may be reduced, such as by flowing the purge gas so a time for flowing the gas along a surface is smaller than a diffusion time for a contamination particle to traverse a flow path of the gas. Spec. i-fi-134 and 43. Independent claim 1 is illustrative and is reproduced below from the Claims Appendix of the Appeal Brief. 3 The limitations at issue are italicized. 1. A lithographic apparatus comprising: an illumination system configured to condition a radiation beam; a support constructed to support a patterning device, the patterning device being capable of imparting the radiation beam with a pattern in its cross-section to form a patterned radiation beam; a substrate table constructed to hold a substrate; a projection system configured to project the patterned radiation beam onto a target portion of the substrate; a vacuum chamber through which the patterned beam of radiation is projected during use; and 3 Appeal Br. 10. 2 Appeal2015-000778 Application 12/745,344 a purge system configured to provide a purge gas flow in the chamber along a purge gas flow path parallel to and across an entire surface of an optical device, wherein a time for flowing the purge gas along the surface of the optical device is smaller than a diffusion time for contamination particles moved by the purge gas flow to transverse the purge gas flow path. The claims on appeal stand rejected as follows: (1) claims 1and3-11under35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as unpatentable over Hasegawa4 in view of Sogard; 5 (2) claim 12 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as unpatentable over Hasegawa and Sogard and further in view of Shuichi;6 and (3) claim 14 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as being unpatentable Hasegawa and Sogard and further in view of Oshino.7 B. DISCUSSION Rejection (1) Claims l and 3-11 are rejected under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as unpatentable over Hasegawa in view of Sogard. Appellants argue Hasegawa and Sogard do not disclose a purge system configured to provide a purge gas flow path that is both parallel to and across an entire surface of an optical device. Appeal Br. 5. Moreover, because Sogard does not disclose that the purge gas flow path is across an entire surface of an optical device, Appellants argue that Sogard "cannot teach a time for flowing the purge gas along the entire surface of the optical device is smaller than a diffusion time for 4 Hasegawa, US 2005/0110966 Al, published May 26, 2005 ("Hasegawa"). 5 Sogard, US 2007/0079525 Al, published Apr. 12, 2007 ("Sogard"). 6 Shuichi et al., US 2007/0030466 Al, published Feb. 8, 2007 ("Shuichi"). 7 Oshino et al., US 2004/0051984 Al, published Mar. 18, 2004 ("Oshino"). 3 Appeal2015-000778 Application 12/745,344 contamination particles moved by the purge gas flow to transverse the purge gas flow path, as recited by claim 1." Appeal Br. 5. Appellants' arguments are not persuasive of reversible error. "[T]he test for combining references is not what the individual references themselves suggest but rather what the combination of disclosures taken as a whole would suggest to one of ordinary skill in the art." In re McLaughlin, 443F.2d1392, 1395(CCPA1971). Appellants' arguments address the disclosures of Hasegawa and Sogard individually, not what the combination of the disclosures of Hasegawa and Sogard as a whole would have suggested to one of ordinary skill in the art. The Examiner finds Hasegawa discloses a lithographic apparatus including an illumination system, a support for a patterning device, a substrate table, a projection system, a vacuum chamber, and a purge system. Final Act. 3--4. The purge system disclosed by Hasegawa is used so material accumulated on cryo- panels is not scattered into a light-path space or adhered to mirrors during reactivation of the cryo-panels. Hasegawa i-fi-1 97, 98, and 101. The Examiner finds the gas flow path used during the cryo-panel reactivation process of Hasegawa is across the entire top surface of mirror 6 and prevents contamination of mirror 6. Final Act. 4; see also Hasegawa i-fi-f 101, 108 and Figure 3. Appellants' arguments do not demonstrate how the flow path described by Hasegawa would not be across the entire surface of mirror 6. The Examiner finds Hasegawa does not disclose a parallel gas flow. Ans. 2. Nonetheless, it is of no moment in the§ 103(a) rejection on appeal that Hasegawa does not disclose that limitation. Here, the Examiner finds Sogard discloses a gas flow path that is parallel to a surface of a reticle. Final Act. 4; Ans. 3; see also Sogard i-fi-120 and 59. Appellants do not direct us to any error in the Examiner's finding. 4 Appeal2015-000778 Application 12/745,344 As for the time limitation recited in claim 1, the Examiner finds, and the Appellants do not dispute, that Sogard discloses a gas flow velocity of several hundred meters per second so particles cannot move towards a reticle. Final Act. 4; see also Sogard i-f 59 (disclosing a flow velocity of "5 m/sec to several hundred m/sec"). Thus, in the Examiner's proposed modification of Hasegawa, wherein the purge gas flows across the entire surface of Hasegawa's optical device, the purge gas would flow at the gas flow velocity disclosed in Sogard. The Examiner finds Sogard's gas flow velocity would be sufficient for flowing gas along the surface of Hasegawa's optical device for a time that is smaller than a diffusion time for contamination particles to transverse the purge gas flow path, as recited in claim 1. Final Act. 4; Ans. 3. Appellants have failed to establish otherwise. Finally, Appellants contend there would have been no reason to modify Hasegawa to use the gas flow arrangement of Sogard without the benefit of impermissible hindsight because Sogard's arrangement is used to prevent contamination of a reticle, and is not used for cryo-panel reactivation. Appeal Br. 6. Appellants' argument is unpersuasive of reversible error. As found by the Examiner: One of ordinary skill in the art at the time the invention was made, given the teaching of a gas flow to prevent contamination of the optical surface of a mirror in a lithographic apparatus as taught by Hasegawa in paragraphs [0101], [0108] and [0112], would reasonably look to the teaching in paragraph [0059] of Sogard of a gas flow velocity and parallel gas flow in order to prevent contamination from adhering to the surface of an optical element via a laminar gas flow with sufficient velocity to entrain the particle and remove it from the vicinity of the optical surface within lithographic apparatus. Ans. 4. 5 Appeal2015-000778 Application 12/745,344 In response, Appellants argue there would have been no reason to modify Hasegawa to use the gas flow arrangement of Sogard because Hasegawa already provides a means to prevent adhesion of substances to mirrors. Reply Br. 3--4. We disagree. The mere fact that Hasegawa discloses a means to prevent adhesion of substances to mirrors would not have discouraged one of ordinary skill in the art from considering other known ways to prevent adhesion of substances to mirrors. See Syntex (U.S.A.) LLC v. Apotex, Inc., 407 F.3d 1371, 1380 (Fed. Cir. 2005) ("[a] prior art reference that does not specifically refer to one element of a combination does not, per se, teach away. If it did, only references that anticipate could be used to support an obviousness analysis."). Appellants do not present any arguments in support of the separate patentability of claims 3-11. Appeal Br. 7-8. Therefore, for the reasons set forth above, and for those expressed in the Examiner's Answer, the§ 103(a) rejection of claims 1 and 3-11 over Hasegawa and Sogard is sustained. Rejections (2) and (3) Claim 12 is rejected under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as unpatentable over Hasegawa and Sogard and further in view of Shuichi. Claim 14 is rejected under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as being unpatentable Hasegawa and Sogard and further in view of Oshino. For the rejections of claims 12 and 14, Appellants contend Shuichi and Oshino do not remedy the deficiencies of the references applied in the rejection of claim 1. Appeal Br. 8. For the reasons set forth above, there are no deficiencies in the rejection of claim 1 that require curing by Shuichi or Oshino. 6 Appeal2015-000778 Application 12/745,344 C. DECISION The decision of the Examiner is affirmed. No time period for taking any subsequent action in connection with this appeal may be extended under 3 7 C.F .R. § 1.13 6( a)( 1 ). AFFIRMED 7 Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation