Ex Parte Robinson et alDownload PDFPatent Trial and Appeal BoardDec 23, 201412492484 (P.T.A.B. Dec. 23, 2014) 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. 12/492,484 06/26/2009 Earl T. Robinson FN-0036 US NP1 7374 77003 7590 12/24/2014 MCDONNELL BOEHNEN HULBERT & BERGHOFF LLP 300 S. WACKER DRIVE SUITE 3100 CHICAGO, IL 60606 EXAMINER MERKLING, MATTHEW J ART UNIT PAPER NUMBER 1725 MAIL DATE DELIVERY MODE 12/24/2014 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 EARL T. ROBINSON, FRANCIS S. LAU, and DWAIN DODSON1 ____________ Appeal 2013-001577 Application 12/492,484 Technology Center 1700 ____________ Before PETER F. KRATZ, KAREN M. HASTINGS, and WESLEY B. DERRICK, Administrative Patent Judges. DERRICK, Administrative Patent Judge. DECISION ON APPEAL Appellants appeal under 35 U.S.C. § 134(a) from the Primary Examiner’s rejection of claims 1–23 as unpatentable for obviousness over Goldstein et al. (U.S. Patent No. 4,348,487, issued September 7, 1982) in view of Inoue et al. (US 2004/0180971 A1, published September 16, 2004), Breu (U.S. Patent No. 5,225,044, issued July 6, 1993), and Kustes et al. (U.S. Patent No. 4, 540,681, issued September 10, 1985).2 We have jurisdiction under 35 U.S.C. § 6(b). 1 According to Appellants, the Real Party in Interest is GreatPoint Energy, Inc. App. Br. 1. 2 Notwithstanding the Examiner’s comment regarding the grounds of rejection being maintained by the Examiner without furnishing the noted subheading as to withdrawn rejections (Ans. 2), the record makes it clear Appeal 2013-001577 Application 12/492,484 2 We AFFIRM. STATEMENT OF CASE Appellants’ invention relates to a system with four gasification reactors for converting carbonaceous feedstock into a plurality of gases and generating a methane product stream from the plurality of gases. Spec. Abstract. Independent claim 1 is illustrative of the claimed invention3 (emphasis added): 1. A gasification system to generate a plurality of gases from a catalyzed carbonaceous feedstock, and a methane product stream from the plurality of gases, the system comprising: (a) a first, a second, a third and a fourth gasifying reactor unit, wherein each gasifying reactor unit independently comprises: (A1) a reaction chamber in which a catalyzed carbonaceous feedstock and steam are converted to (i) a plurality of gaseous products comprising methane, hydrogen, carbon monoxide, carbon dioxide, hydrogen sulfide and unreacted steam, (ii) unreacted carbonaceous fines and (iii) a solid char product comprising entrained catalyst; (A2) a feed inlet to supply the catalyzed carbonaceous feedstock into the reaction chamber; that a further provisional rejection obviousness-type double patenting was withdrawn (Advisory Action, May 9, 2012) on the basis Applicants expressly abandoned the applications on which the rejection was based (Response After Final, dated May 3, 2012). Two related Applications on Appeal are identified by Appellants. App. Br. 1. 3 As all claims are subject to the same rejection and Appellants do not separately argue the patentability of individual claims, we determine the Appeal as to all claims on the basis of claim 1. 37 C.F.R. § 39(c)(1)(iv). Appeal 2013-001577 Application 12/492,484 3 (A3) a steam inlet to supply steam into the reaction chamber; (A4) a hot gas outlet to exhaust a hot first gas stream out of the reaction chamber, the hot first gas stream comprising the plurality of gaseous products; (A5) a char outlet to withdraw the solid char product from the reaction chamber; and (A6) a fines remover unit to remove at least a substantial portion of the unreacted carbonaceous fines that may be entrained in the hot first gas stream; (b) (1) a single catalyst loading unit to supply the catalyzed carbonaceous feedstock to the feed inlets of the first, second, third and fourth gasifying reactor units, or (2) a first and a second catalyst loading unit to supply the catalyzed carbonaceous feedstock to the feed inlets the first, second, third and fourth gasifying reactor units; or (3) a first, a second and a third catalyst loading unit to supply the catalyzed carbonaceous feedstock to the feed inlets of the first, second, third and fourth gasifying reactor units; or (4) a first, a second, a third catalyst and a fourth catalyst loading unit to supply the catalyzed carbonaceous feedstock to the feed inlets of the first, second, third and fourth gasifying reactor units, wherein each catalyst loading unit independently comprises: (B1) a loading tank to receive carbonaceous particulates and to load catalyst onto the particulates to form the catalyzed carbonaceous feedstock; and (B2) a dryer to thermally treat the catalyzed carbonaceous feedstock to reduce moisture content; (c) (1) when only the single catalyst loading unit is present, a single carbonaceous material processing unit to supply the carbonaceous particulates to the loading tank of the single catalyst loading unit, or Appeal 2013-001577 Application 12/492,484 4 (2) when only the first and second catalyst loading units are present, a single carbonaceous material processing unit to supply the carbonaceous particulates to the loading tanks of the first and second catalyst loading units, or (3) when only the first, second and third catalyst loading units are present, a single carbonaceous material processing unit to supply the carbonaceous particulates to the loading tanks of the first, second and third catalyst loading units, or (4) when the first, second, third and fourth catalyst loading units are present, a single carbonaceous material processing unit to supply the carbonaceous particulates to the loading tanks of the first, second, third and fourth catalyst loading units, wherein the single carbonaceous material processing unit comprises: (C1) a receiver to receive and store a carbonaceous material; and (C2) a grinder to grind the carbonaceous material into the carbonaceous particulates, the grinder in communication with the receiver; (d) (1) a single heat exchanger unit to remove heat energy from the hot first gas streams from the first, second, third and fourth gasifying reactor units to generate steam and produce a single cooled first gas stream, or (2) a first and a second heat exchanger unit to remove heat energy from the hot first gas streams from the first, second, third and fourth gasifying reactor units to generate steam, a first cooled first gas stream and a second cooled first gas stream, or (3) a first, a second, a third and a fourth heat exchanger unit to remove heat energy from the hot first gas streams from the first second, third and fourth gasifying reactor unit to generate steam and produce a first cooled first gas stream, a second cooled first gas stream, a third cooled first gas stream and a fourth cooled first gas stream; Appeal 2013-001577 Application 12/492,484 5 (e) (1) when only the single heat exchanger unit is present, a single acid gas remover unit to remove at least a substantial portion of the carbon dioxide and at least a substantial portion of the hydrogen sulfide from the single cooled first gas stream, to produce a single acid gas-depleted gas stream comprising at least a substantial portion of the methane, at least a substantial portion of the hydrogen and, optionally, at least a portion of the carbon monoxide from the single cooled first gas stream, or (2) when only the first and second heat exchanger units are present, (i) a single acid gas remover unit to remove at least a substantial portion of the carbon dioxide and at least a substantial portion of the hydrogen sulfide from the first and second cooled first gas streams to produce a single acid gas- depleted gas stream comprising at least a substantial portion of the methane, at least a substantial portion of the hydrogen and, optionally, at least a portion of the carbon monoxide from the first and second cooled first gas streams, or (ii) a first and a second acid gas remover unit to remove at least a substantial portion of the carbon dioxide and at least a substantial portion of the hydrogen sulfide from the first and second cooled first gas streams to produce a first acid gas depleted gas-stream and a second acid gas-depleted gas stream, wherein the first and second acid gas-depleted gas streams together comprise at least a substantial portion of the methane, at least a substantial portion of the hydrogen and, optionally, at least a portion of the carbon monoxide from the first and second cooled first gas streams, or (3) when the first, second, third and fourth heat exchanger units are present, (i) a single acid gas remover unit to remove at least a substantial portion of the carbon dioxide and at least a substantial portion of the hydrogen sulfide from the first, second, third and fourth cooled first gas streams to produce a single acid gas-depleted gas stream comprising at least a substantial portion of the methane, at least a substantial portion of the hydrogen and, optionally, at least a portion of the carbon monoxide from the first, second, third and fourth cooled first gas streams, or (ii) a first and a second acid gas remover unit to remove a substantial portion of the carbon dioxide and at Appeal 2013-001577 Application 12/492,484 6 least a substantial portion of the hydrogen sulfide from the first, second, third and fourth cooled first gas streams to produce a first acid gas-depleted gas stream and a second acid gas- depleted gas stream, wherein the first and second acid gas- depleted gas streams together comprise at least a substantial portion of the methane, at least a substantial portion of the hydrogen and, optionally, at least a portion of the carbon monoxide from the first, second, third and fourth cooled first gas streams, or (iii) a first acid, a second acid, a third and a fourth acid gas remover unit to remove at least a substantial portion of the carbon dioxide and at least a substantial portion of the hydrogen sulfide from the first, second, third and fourth cooled first gas streams to produce a first acid gas-depleted gas stream, a second acid gas-depleted gas stream, a third acid gas- depleted gas stream and a fourth acid gas-depleted gas stream, wherein the first, second, third and fourth acid gas-depleted gas streams together comprise at least a substantial portion of the methane, at least a substantial portion of the hydrogen and, optionally, at least a portion of the carbon monoxide from the first, second, third and fourth cooled first gas streams; (f) (1) when only the single acid gas-depleted stream is present, a single methane removal unit to separate and recover methane from the single acid gas-depleted gas stream, to produce a single methane-depleted gas stream and a single methane product stream, the single methane product stream comprising at least a substantial portion of the methane from the single acid gas-depleted gas stream, or (2) when only the first and second acid gas-depleted gas streams are present, (i) a single methane removal unit to separate and recover methane from the first and second acid gas-depleted gas streams to produce a single methane-depleted gas stream and a single methane product stream, the single methane product stream comprising at least a substantial portion of the methane from the first and second acid gas- depleted gas streams, or (ii) a first and a second methane removal unit to separate and recover methane from the first and second acid gas-depleted gas streams to produce a first methane-depleted gas stream and a first methane product Appeal 2013-001577 Application 12/492,484 7 stream, and a second methane-depleted gas stream and a second methane product stream, the first and second methane product streams together comprising at least a substantial portion of the methane from the first and second acid gas-depleted gas streams, or (3) when the first, second, third and fourth acid gas- depleted gas streams are present, (i) a single methane removal unit to separate and recover methane from the first, second, third and fourth acid gas-depleted gas streams to produce a single methane-depleted gas stream and a single methane product stream, the single methane product stream comprising at least a substantial portion of the methane from the first, second, third and fourth acid gas-depleted gas streams, or (ii) a first methane removal unit and a second methane removal unit to separate and recover methane from the first, second, third and fourth acid gas-depleted gas streams to produce a first methane-depleted gas stream and a first methane product stream, and a second methane-depleted gas stream and a second methane product stream, wherein the first and second methane product streams together comprise at least a substantial portion of the methane from the first, second third and fourth acid gas- depleted gas streams, or (iii) a first, a second, a third and a fourth methane removal unit to separate and recover methane from the first, second, third and fourth acid gas-depleted streams to produce a first methane-depleted gas stream and a first methane product stream, a second methane-depleted gas stream and a second methane product stream, a third methane- depleted gas stream and a third methane product stream, and a fourth methane-depleted gas stream and a fourth methane product stream, the first, second, third and fourth methane product streams together comprising at least a substantial portion of the methane from the first, second, third and fourth acid gas-depleted gas streams; and (g) (1) a single steam source to supply steam to the steam inlets of the first, second, third and fourth gasifying reactor units, or Appeal 2013-001577 Application 12/492,484 8 (2) a first and a second steam source to supply stream to the steam inlets of the first, second, third and fourth gasifying reactor units; and wherein the system further comprises (r) a sour shift unit between a heat exchanger unit and an acid gas remover unit, to contact a cooled first gas stream with an aqueous medium under conditions suitable to convert at least a portion of carbon monoxide in the cooled first gas stream to carbon dioxide; and a trim methanator to enrich methane in an acid-gas depleted gas stream. ANALYSIS We have reviewed the Examiner’s rejection under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) in light of arguments advanced by Appellants in the Appeal Brief and the Reply Brief, but are not persuaded the Examiner erred reversibly in concluding the claims are unpatentable, essentially for the reasons expressed in the Final Office Action and the Examiner’s Answer, which we adopt.4 See Final Action 4–10; Ans. 2–3. We add the following for emphasis. The Examiner has determined, inter alia, that Goldstein discloses a gasification system nearly identical to that claimed (Final Action 4–6 (citing Goldstein Figure, particularly for the portion of Goldstein’s process/system up through the methane removal unit)), but does not explicitly disclose duplicating the various structures, or a subset of the structures, and their arrangement in parallel where duplicated (id. at 6). The Examiner concludes that duplicating any or all of these parts would have been obvious to one of ordinary skill because it would allow for duplicated parts to be taken offline 4 Rather than reiterate all arguments of Appellants and the Examiner, we refer to the Final Office Action (mailed March 8, 2012), the Appeal Brief (filed July 18, 2012), the Answer (mailed September 12, 2012), and the Reply Brief (filed November 6, 2012). Appeal 2013-001577 Application 12/492,484 9 for maintenance without disrupting operations and “duplicating any or all of these structures would increase the capacity of the claimed system.†Id. (citing Breu col. 4, ll. 9–14). As to other differences, the Examiner finds that while Goldstein teaches gasifying carbonaceous material to produce methane, it does not explicitly disclose a grinder to pulverize the feed material prior to its use or a shift reactor and methanator to increase production of methane. Id. at 7. The Examiner finds Inoue also discloses a system for gasifying a carbonaceous material to produce a synthesis gas, and that Inoue teaches a grinder to pulverize feed material to increase surface area and the reaction efficiency. Id. The Examiner finds Kustes also discloses a gasification system to produce methane and teaches a shift reactor (24) and a methanator (30) to increase methane production, explaining that the shift reactor adjusts the composition of the synthesis gas to be favorable for conversion by the methanator into methane. Id. (citing Kustes col. 4, ll. 34–47).5 The Examiner concludes one of ordinary skill would have found it obvious to one of ordinary skill to further modify modified Goldstein (i.e., the portion of Goldstein’s process/system up through the methane removal unit with duplication of a subset of structures and their arrangement in 5 The Final Office Action omits the column number, but we find this error harmless as the relevant teaching is readily found in the cited reference. Further, we find the relied-upon teaching undisputed – Appellants do not contest Kustes teaches use of a shift reactor and methanator to produce more methane. See, e.g., App. Br. 12. Indeed, Goldstein discloses the use of a water gas shift and methanator units are known prior art options for producing methane as a product from synthesis gas obtained from catalytic gasification of coal or similar carbonaceous materials (col. 1, ll. 19–25). Appeal 2013-001577 Application 12/492,484 10 parallel) by adding the grinder of Inoue to increase the surface area of the carbonaceous material thereby increasing reaction efficiency (id. at 7) and the shift reactor and methanator of Kustes to produce more methane (id. at 7–8). Appellants argue that the Examiner has failed to establish a prima facie case of obviousness because Goldstein teaches away from the claimed invention, one of ordinary skill would not combine the cited references, and the combination does not teach or suggest all claim limitations. In their “teaching away†argument, Appellants emphasize that Goldstein is “directed to the ultimate production of a methanol product stream (along with a methane product stream) . . . as opposed to an ‘optimized’ methane product stream as required by the present claims.†App. Br. 9. Appellants argue that to provide the methanol stream, Goldstein requires both a methanol production unit and that there is “substantial carbon monoxide content (as well as hydrogen content) in the feed stream to the methanol production unit.†Id. at 10. Appellants also argue Goldstein teaches an optional treatment to steam reform some methane into carbon monoxide and hydrogen (syngas). Id. Appellants argue that removing carbon dioxide at any place in Goldstein’s process would negatively impact its operation. Id. at 10–11; Reply Br. 5–6. Appellants then argue that Goldstein teaches away from the claimed invention because the claimed invention “includes two unit operations specifically designed to consume (and thus materially deplete) carbon monoxide content . . . the sour shift unit and the trim methanation unit.†App. Br. 11; see also Reply Br. 6. Whether the prior art teaches away from the claimed invention is a question of fact. Dystar Textilfarben GmbH v. C.H. Patrick Co., 464 F.3d Appeal 2013-001577 Application 12/492,484 11 1356, 1360 (Fed. Cir. 2006); In re Harris, 409 F.3d 1339, 1341 (Fed. Cir. 2005). It is well established that a prior art reference must be considered in its entirety, i.e., as a whole, when determining if it would lead one of ordinary skill in the art away from the claimed invention. W.L. Gore & Assoc, Inc. v. Garlock, Inc., 721 F.2d 1540, 1550 (Fed. Cir. 1983); cf. Para– Ordnance Manufacturing, Inc. v. SGS Importers International, Inc., 73 F.3d 1085, 1090 (Fed. Cir. 1995) (to teach away, a reference must state that a feature “should not†or “cannot†be used in combination with other features in the prior art.). Having considered the record before us, we are not persuaded that Goldstein teaches away from the claimed invention. We find the Examiner’s reliance on Goldstein was for its teaching of the portion of Goldstein’s process/system through the methane removal unit (76) and provision of a methane stream (77) and methane depleted stream (78), i.e., a syngas stream. Final Action 4–6; Ans. 2. While the syngas stream in unmodified Goldstein is used as the feed stream in the methanol production unit, in the relied-upon combination of, inter alia, Goldstein and Kustes, syngas is used as the feed stream for a methanator to produce additional methane. In this regard, representative appealed claim 1 employs the open “comprising†transitional term and is open to including other system components. Thus, claim 1 embraces a gasification/methanol production line of components such as employed in the methanol synthesis production line of Goldstein in addition to the gasification/methane synthesis line of unit operations called for in representative claim 1. After all, both methane and methanol are desirable products. Appeal 2013-001577 Application 12/492,484 12 Accordingly, we do not find the teachings of Goldstein directed to optimizing the syngas composition for the production of methanol constitute any manner of teaching away from optimizing the syngas composition for the production of methane. Nor do we find Goldstein’s teaching of an optional treatment to reform some methane into carbon monoxide and hydrogen (App. Br. 10; Reply Br. 5) constitutes any teaching away as being optional it also teaches that it is not used. In their argument why one of ordinary skill would not combine the references, Appellants argue that the system of Kustes would not be utilized or even considered for use with the system of either Goldstein or Inoue because it would deplete carbon monoxide used in both Goldstein and Inoue for the production of methanol. App. Br. 10–11. On this basis, Appellants argue that “[a]ny combination of the disclosure of Kustes et al. with the other disclosures, therefore, cannot be legally or factually supported.†Id. at 12. We do not find this argument persuasive of reversible error because it does not address the rejection set forth by the Examiner. As we explain above, the Examiner relies on the collective teachings of the applied prior art including a portion of the system/process of Goldstein for its teaching of system/process to provide, inter alia, a feed stream of syngas. The Examiner relies on Kustes for its teaching of, inter alia, a shift reactor and methanator to optimize methane production from the syngas. The fact that Goldstein includes a methanol synthesis reactor to use the syngas falls short of showing one of ordinary skill would not look to Goldstein in the manner set forth by the Examiner. As to Inoue, the Examiner relies on it for its teaching of grinding feedstock (Final Action 7), which teaching is Appeal 2013-001577 Application 12/492,484 13 undisputed (App. Br. 11), and Appellants’ arguments one of ordinary skill would not combine it with Goldstein and Kustes lacks merit. In their argument that the combination of references does not teach or suggest all claim limitations, Appellants argue that the claimed invention is “an overall system configuration where certain units are duplicated and other units are combined . . . in order to achieve an integrated system that is both commercially functional and commercially feasible for the intended purpose†and that the invention is “more than just duplication of the central gasification reactors.†Id. at 12. On this basis Appellants argue that the teaching of duplication to increase capacity in Breu falls short, as does the Examiner’s reasoning, because “[t]he Examiner has provided no technical basis that would lead a person or [sic] ordinary skill . . . to make the choices set forth in the presently claimed invention.†Id. at 12–13; see also Reply Br. 6. Having considered the record before us, we find no reversible error in the Examiner’s determination that combining or duplicating certain process units has no patentable significance unless a new and unexpected result is produced. Final Action 6–7, 10; Ans. 3. We find Appellants have not provided any evidence that there is any new or unexpected result, only attorney argument as to a “system that is both commercially functional and commercially feasible for the intended purpose†(App. Br. 12) and this lacks merit both because attorney argument is not evidence and because the claims are not so limited. Finally, we find that claim 1, which recites different numbers of elements in the alternative, encompasses a system where the only duplicated element may be the gasification reactor. See italicized text in representative claim 1 above. For these reasons and those set forth by the Appeal 2013-001577 Application 12/492,484 14 Examiner, we are unpersuaded the Examiner erred in finding one of ordinary skill would have found it obvious to duplicate or combine various known process units to arrive at the claimed invention. In view of the foregoing, we determine that Appellants have not identified reversible error in the Examiner’s conclusion that Goldstein, Kustes, Inoue, and Breu, would have suggested the system for preparing a methane stream from carbonaceous material as recited in the claims on appeal within the meaning of 35 U.S.C. § 103(a). DECISION We AFFIRM the Examiner’s decision rejecting claims 1–23. No time period for taking any subsequent action in connection with this appeal may be extended under 37 C.F.R. § 1.136(a)(1). See 37 C.F.R. § 1.136(a)(1)(iv) (2010). AFFIRMED bar Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation