Ex Parte SunDownload PDFPatent Trial and Appeal BoardJan 7, 201912413350 (P.T.A.B. Jan. 7, 2019) Copy Citation UNITED STA TES p A TENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE APPLICATION NO. FILING DATE 12/413,350 03/27/2009 76362 7590 01/09/2019 ELECTRO SCIENTIFIC INDUSTRIES, INC. 13900 N.W. SCIENCE PARK DRIVE PORTLAND, OR 97229 FIRST NAMED INVENTOR Yunlong Sun 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. SR-214:USl (50001/214:1) 8862 EXAMINER DUNNER, DIALLO IGWE ART UNIT PAPER NUMBER 3761 NOTIFICATION DATE DELIVERY MODE 01/09/2019 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): ESILegal@esi.com vermilyal@esi.com eatonk@esi.com PTOL-90A (Rev. 04/07) UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE BEFORE THE PATENT TRIAL AND APPEAL BOARD Ex parte YUNLONG SUN Appeal2017-000225 Application 12/413,350 Technology Center 3700 Before GEORGE R. HOSKINS, BRADLEY B. BAY AT, and PAUL J. KORNICZKY, Administrative Patent Judges. HOSKINS, Administrative Patent Judge. DECISION ON APPEAL STATEMENT OF THE CASE Yunlong Sun ("Appellant") 1 appeals under 35 U.S.C. § 134 from the Examiner's decision rejecting all pending claims 1-6 in this application. The Board has jurisdiction over the appeal under 35 U.S.C. § 6(b ). We REVERSE. 2 1 The Appeal Brief identifies Electro Scientific Industries, Inc. as the real party in interest. Appeal Br. 3. 2 Pursuant to Appellant's Request for Oral Hearing filed on September 28, 2016, the Board scheduled a hearing to occur on October 11, 2018. Appellant then elected to waive the hearing, via a notice filed on August 1, 2018. Therefore, we decide this appeal without holding an oral hearing. Appeal2017-000225 Application 12/413,350 CLAIMED SUBJECT MATTER Claim 1, the sole independent claim on appeal, recites: 1. A laser micromachining method comprising: generating, using an ultrafast laser source, a burst of laser pulses; adjusting respective amplitudes of individual laser pulses within the burst of laser pulses, using a high-speed optical modulator, to produce a selectively shaped single burst envelope for processing a target location of a workpiece, the target location including a first layer overlying a second layer, wherein the first layer and the second layer comprise different materials with different laser processing characteristics, the adjusting compnsmg: selectively adjusting one or more first laser pulses within the single burst envelope to a first amplitude based on processing characteristics of a first layer at a target location; and selectively adjusting one or more second laser pulses within the single burst envelope to a second amplitude based on processing characteristics of a second layer at the target location; and directing the amplitude adjusted burst of laser pulses to the target location, the single burst envelope of laser pulses processing both the first layer and the second layer at the same target location. Appeal Br. 13 (Claims App.). REJECTIONS ON APPEAL Claims 1-3 and 6 stand rejected under 35 U.S.C. § I02(b) as anticipated by Kyusho (US 2002/0009843 Al, pub. Jan. 24, 2002). Claims 4 and 5 stand rejected under 35 U.S.C. § I03(a) as unpatentable over Kyusho and Cordingley (US 2002/0167581 Al, pub. Nov. 14, 2002). 2 Appeal2017-000225 Application 12/413,350 Claims 1-3 and 6 stand rejected under 35 U.S.C. § I03(a) as unpatentable over Gu (US 2006/0108337 Al, pub. May 25, 2006) and Cheng (US 2005/0255715 Al, pub. Nov. 17, 2005). Claims 4 and 5 stand rejected under 35 U.S.C. § I03(a) as unpatentable over Gu, Cheng, and Cordingley. ANALYSIS A. Anticipation by Kyusho (Claims 1-3 and 6) In rejecting claim 1, the Examiner finds Kyusho discloses a laser micromachining method, including generating a burst of laser pulses, and "adjusting of the burst of laser pulses, using a high-speed optical modulator le ... , to produce a selectively shaped single burst envelope." Final Act. 2 (citing Kyusho, Figs. 1 and 3,3 ,r,r 108, 115-116, 132, 141). The Examiner further finds "K yusho discloses that the first pulse of the laser is smaller to remove" a first layer, and "making the second pulse of the laser larger removes" a second layer. Id. at 3 ( emphases added) ( citing K yusho ,r 115). As further explained in the Advisory Action, "Kyusho may not produce the varying pulse widths and amplitudes as described by [Appellant's] specification," but "Kyusho does teach of varying the multiple laser pulses ... using a predetermined time frame of pulsing as recited in claim 1" by controlling "parameters of the time intervals of the laser irradiation and the pulse width of the laser." Adv. Act. 2. Appellant argues Kyusho fails to disclose, as claimed, "adjusting respective amplitudes of individual laser pulses within a burst of laser 3 The Examiner cites all of Kyusho's Figures 1-10, but the issues presented on appeal are represented by Figures 1 and 3. 3 Appeal2017-000225 Application 12/413,350 pulses," including the specifically recited "selectively adjusting one or more first laser pulses within the single burst envelope to a first amplitude" and "selectively adjusting one or more second laser pulses within the single burst envelope to a second amplitude." Appeal Br. 6-7. According to Appellant, rather than implementing the claimed adjustment, "Kyusho discloses 'slicing laser light pulses out of the string of mode-locked pulses by using the optical shutter 2,"' such that "the string of laser pulses output by Kyusho's laser have set amplitudes that Kyusho selects ('slices')." Id. at 7 (citing Kyusho, Figs. 3A-3C). Thus, in Appellant's view, Kyusho "does not selectively adjust the amplitudes of the individual laser pulses within a slice," and instead Kyusho "is limited to a predetermined set of amplitudes and/or combinations of amplitudes" provided by "the initial shape of the Q-switched pulse waveform." Id. at 7-8. The Examiner's Answer maintains the rejection, by quoting the Kyusho disclosure at some length, and emphasizing certain portions of the quotations. Ans. 4--10 (quoting Kyusho ,r,r 110, 115, 134, 142-144). The Answer, further, finds that Kyusho's apparatus "has the ability to increase and decrease the amplitude of the laser pulses 20, prior to slicing." Id. at 7, 9 (emphasis added) (citing Kyusho ,r,r 141-143). Finally: "Since Kyusho teaches the changing of the power of the modulating laser pulses and of the intensity of the sliced laser pulses, the Examiner interprets that Kyusho reads on all of the limitation of claim 1." Id. at 7 ( emphases added). Upon consideration of the foregoing, we agree with Appellant. Figure 1 ofKyusho is reproduced below: 4 Appeal2017-000225 Application 12/413,350 FYG.1 DD lj ,, JO J; WZI.J'r.dttnf!th . ~ , ....... ,:.u: .. 1ect10n m1.n·or : i Figure 1 illustrates Kyusho's laser-based repair apparatus. Kyusho ,r,r 118, 141. Q-switched mode-locked pulse laser oscillator head 1 produces stable mode-locked pulses 20. Id. ,r,r 141-142. The Final Office Action makes passing reference to modulator le (Final Act. 2), and the Answer states laser pumping section 1 a is capable of increasing and decreasing the amplitude of pulses 20, prior to slicing by optical shutter 2 (Ans. 7, 9). However, we are unable to discern in the various Kyusho disclosures cited by the Examiner any indication that laser oscillator head 1 is used, as claimed, to "selectively adjust[]" the amplitudes of individual laser pulses 20 within the burst envelope of pulses 20. Appellant argues, and we agree, that a broadest reasonable construction of the selective adjustment limitations in claim 1 do not encompass adjusting "combinations of amplitudes" of pulses in the burst. See, e.g., Appeal Br. 7-8. Rather, these limitations require the ability to select one individual pulse within the burst, and adjust the 5 Appeal2017-000225 Application 12/413,350 amplitude of that pulse, independently of the amplitudes of the other pulses in the burst, to produce a desired burst envelope profile. See Appellant's Fig. 2; Spec. ,r,r 17, 37-38, 46. The Examiner cites quite a large swath of Kyusho's disclosure (paragraphs 108, 115, 116, 132, and 141-143, and all ofKyusho's Figures 1-10), without adequately explaining any specific disclosure(s) therein to support the Examiner's finding that laser oscillator head 1 is used to selectively adjust the amplitudes of individual laser pulses 20 within the burst envelope of pulses 20. See Final Act. 2; Ans. 7, 9. Based on our review of the K yusho disclosure, it appears that laser oscillator head 1 is limited to adjusting "peak power" or "intensity" of the laser, with such adjustments applied to the entirety of the burst of pulses 20 produced by laser oscillator head 1, rather selectively to individual pulses 20 within the burst. Kyusho ,r,r 110, 134. That is, laser oscillator head 1 appears to be limited to producing the burst envelope shape of pulses 20 illustrated in the upper-right-hand comer of Figure 1. Thus, laser oscillator head 1 does not, as claimed, selectively adjust the amplitudes of first and second pulses 20 within the burst envelope. The burst envelope shape of pulses 20 produced by laser oscillator head 1 travels to optical shutter 2, which is "used to slice a desired number of pulses" from the burst of pulses 20. Id. ,r,r 141-142 (emphasis added). According to Kyusho: "[B]y controlling the optical shutter 2 so that two pulses or more can be sliced, multi-pulses can be produced." Id. ,r 143 (emphasis added). Figures 3A-3C ofKyusho illustrate three different multi-pulses that can be sliced by optical shutter 2 from the burst of pulses 20 generated by laser oscillator head 1. Id. ,r 144. In this way, 6 Appeal2017-000225 Application 12/413,350 "multi-pulses can be freely produced" for performing different material processing tasks, such as for example "making the first pulse smaller to remove only the CrO layer and by making the second pulse larger to remove Cr layer" of a mask. Id. ,r 115. However, we are persuaded by Appellant's argument that Kyusho does not disclose the particular method of pulse generation recited in claim 1. Specifically, Kyusho does not disclose, as claimed, "adjusting respective amplitudes of individual laser pulses within the burst of laser pulses," by "selectively adjusting" first and second pulse amplitudes "within the single burst envelope." Appeal Br. 13 (Claims App.) ( emphasis added). Instead, Kyusho discloses generating different bursts of laser pulses by slicing those bursts of pulses from a single, larger burst of pulses. This is illustrated in Figures 3A-3C, reproduced below: envelope of Q ·switc:hed pulse waveform position for slicing I d! __ AJJJL '----···· ------·----~,..--·······--- - ........ _I FIG.SA position hr slicing I J _JulUL _ \, ·---------~--- ----..._..,-······----------------' \_ FIG.SB position for slicing I . jLi _ ___,I /LJlJL_ FIG.SC These Figures show three examples of slicing laser light pulses out of a string (i.e., a burst) of nine pulses, shown at the top of each Figure, to form different bursts of four pulses, shown at the bottom of each Figure. Kyusho ,r,r 120, 144. 7 Appeal2017-000225 Application 12/413,350 Kyusho's selective slicing of a sub-set of pulses from a larger burst of pulses does not correspond to the claimed selective adjustment of individual pulse amplitudes within the larger burst of pulses. The amplitude of each pulse is the same before and after the slicing. See Figs. 3A-3C; Reply Br. 3--4. Further, the Examiner has not established that Kyusho discloses any further processing of the selected sub-set of pulses that would correspond to the claimed selective adjustment of individual pulse amplitudes within the sub-set of pulses. Thus, Kyusho's selective slicing of a larger burst of pulses to form smaller bursts of pulses is not a selective adjustment of individual pulse amplitudes within a single burst envelope. For the foregoing reasons, we do not sustain the Examiner's rejection of claim 1 as anticipated by Kyusho. The Examiner's additional consideration of dependent claims 2, 3, and 6 does not address the deficiency of Kyusho's disclosure in relation to independent claim 1 (see Final Act. 4), so we likewise do not sustain the rejection of those claims as anticipated by Kyusho. B. Obviousness over Kyusho and Cordingley (Claims 4 and 5) The Examiner's additional consideration of dependent claims 4 and 5, and of Cordingley, does not address the deficiency ofKyusho's disclosure in relation to independent claim 1. See Final Act. 10-12. Therefore, for the reasons provided above, we do not sustain the rejection of claims 4 and 5 as having been obvious over Kyusho and Cordingley. C. Obviousness over Gu and Cheng (Claims 1-3 and 6) In rejecting claim 1, the Examiner finds Gu discloses a laser micromachining method, including generating a burst of laser pulses. Final 8 Appeal2017-000225 Application 12/413,350 Act. 5 ( citing Gu, Figs. 1 and 4a, 4 ,r,r 24--25). The Examiner further finds Gu's apparatus is "capable of adjusting of the burst of laser pulses, using a acousto-optic modulator ... to produce a selectively shaped single burst envelope for processing a target location" of a wafer work piece, including a first depth overlying a second depth. Id. at 5, 12 (emphasis added) (citing Gu ,r,r 17, 19, 58). The Examiner finds Gu's apparatus is further "capable of' selectively adjusting first and second pulse amplitudes within a single burst envelope, respectively based on processing characteristics of first and second depths at the same target location. Id. at 5---6, 12-13 (citing Gu ,r,r 17, 19, 50-52, 60---66). The Examiner determines that, although Gu's apparatus is capable of performing those functions, Gu does not expressly disclose "the single burst envelope of laser pulses processing both the first layer and the second layer at the same target location," or "adjusting different pulses within the same burst based on different layers." Id. at 6, 12. The Examiner cites Cheng as remedying Gu's failure to disclose producing different bursts based on the different material properties of different layers at the same target location in the work piece. Id. at 6, 13. In particular, the Examiner finds Cheng discloses the patterning of a multi-layered, thin film structure, by selectively ablating different layers in the structure based on their thermal, strength, and absorption spectra. Id. at 6-7 ( citing Cheng, Abstract, ,r,r 1, 11, 19). Cheng does this, according to the Examiner, "by using an ultra-fast laser programmed with the appropriate wavelength (A.), pulse width (r), spectral width (L'i1v), spot size, bite size and 4 The Examiner cites all of Gu's Figures 1-9, but the issues presented on appeal are represented by Figures 1 and 4a. 9 Appeal2017-000225 Application 12/413,350 fluency." Id.; Cheng ,r 11. The Examiner determines a person of ordinary skill in the art: would have clearly recognized that it is quite advantageous to modify amplitude adjusted laser pulses processing both the first depth and the second depth at the same target location of Gu in view of amplitude adjusted laser pulses processing both the first layer and the second layer at the same target location of Cheng because Cheng restricting damage to the underlying layers of the structure upon patterning of the layers during fabrication. Id. at 7 (emphases added). The Advisory Action clarifies that "[a]lthough Cheng does not disclose explicitly that the pulse amplitudes are adjusted, Cheng does teach that ablation of the different layers is based on the different thermal absorption characteristics of the layered material." Adv. Act. 2 ( emphasis added). Appellant argues that "none of the cited references teach or suggest adjusting respective amplitudes of individual laser pulses within the burst of laser pulses," as recited in claim 1. Appeal Br. 10-11 ( emphasis omitted). In particular, according to Appellant, "Gu is ... silent as to adjusting amplitudes of individual laser pulses within a burst based on different layers," and the Advisory Action expressly finds Cheng does not disclose adjustment of individual pulse amplitudes. Id. Appellant also argues the Examiner has not articulated any reasoning having a rational underpinning to explain why it would have been obvious, in view of Gu and Cheng, to adjust respective amplitudes of individual laser pulses within Gu' s bursts of laser pulses. Id. at 11. The Examiner's Answer maintains that Gu is capable of adjusting the amplitudes of individual laser pulses within a burst, to produce a selectively shaped single burst envelope for processing different depths at a single target 10 Appeal2017-000225 Application 12/413,350 location in a work piece. Ans. 10-11 (citing Gu ,r,r 17, 19, 50-52, 60-66). The Examiner's Answer further maintains that it would have been obvious to modify Gu's method to include such functionality, based on Cheng's disclosure. Id. at 11-13. In particular, the Examiner finds "Gu teaches that the laser apparatus can be adjusted to consider the different pulse characteristics necessary to mark the wafer at different depths." Id. at 13. The Examiner cites Cheng's Figure 1 as illustrating a work piece having layers 110, 120, and 130 to be differentially patterned without damaging underlying layers. Id. at 13 (citing Cheng ,r,r 22-24). The Examiner concludes it would have been obvious, based on these combined disclosures of Gu and Cheng: to modify amplitude adjusted laser pulses for processing the object at both the first depth and the second depth at the same target location of Gu in view of amplitude adjusted laser pulses for processing the object at both the first layer and the second layer at the same target location of Cheng. Id. ( emphases added). Upon consideration of the foregoing, we agree with Appellant that the Examiner has not sufficiently addressed the requirement in claim 1 for selectively adjusting amplitudes of different individual laser pulses within a single burst of laser pulses, based on processing characteristics of different layers at a target location of a work piece. Appeal Br. 13 (Claims App.). Gu focuses on adjusting the width and perhaps energy of individual laser pulses, to affect the depth of a mark formed in a work piece. Gu, Abstract, ,r,r 17, 24--25, 58, 60-62; id. ,r 51 (Fig. 1 illustrates "marks with depths DI and D2 are formed with laser first and second pulsed laser outputs having pulse widths tl and t2 and energies El and E2"). 11 Appeal2017-000225 Application 12/413,350 We will assume that the individual pulse "energy" or "power" of Gu corresponds to the pulse "amplitude" of claim 1. See Gu, Fig. 1 (illustrating a first pulse shape for marking a wafer to depth D1, and a second pulse shape for marking the wafer to depth D2). However, even with that assumption, Gu's disclosure is limited to adjusting the amplitude of one pulse to vary the depth of a mark formed in the top surface of the work piece. Id. at Fig. 1. The Examiner acknowledges "Cheng does not disclose explicitly that the pulse amplitudes are adjusted" as part of Cheng's differential processing of different layers in a work piece. Adv. Act. 2. Indeed, Cheng discloses modifying several other laser properties to achieve such differential processing, namely: "wavelength (A.), pulse width (T), spectral width (/'i"A), spot size, bite size and fluency." Cheng, Abstract, ,r,r 11, 19-20. Thus, neither Gu nor Cheng expressly discloses adjusting individual pulse amplitudes within a single burst envelope for differential processing of different layers in a work piece. Therefore, obviousness here requires a rational underpinning, supported by a preponderance of the evidence, indicating why a person of ordinary skill in the art would have adjusted individual pulse amplitudes within a single burst envelope for differential processing of different layers in a work piece. See In re Kahn, 441 F.3d 977, 988 (Fed. Cir. 2006), cited with approval in KSR Int 'l Co. v. Teleflex Inc., 550 U.S. 398, 418 (2007). We can find no such reasoning in the Examiner's rejection. Gu does disclose a "'burst mode' operation," in which single pulses (such as the single pulses used in Figure 1) are combined to form a single burst of pulses having a desired envelope shape. Gu ,r 65, Figs. 4a--4c. But, the Examiner does not address how Gu's burst mode operation relates to Gu's single pulse 12 Appeal2017-000225 Application 12/413,350 amplitude adjustment reflected in Figure 1, or provide any reason why it would have been obvious to selectively adjust the amplitudes of first and second individual pulses within a single burst envelope, to perform the differential depth marking function of different single (i.e., un-bursted) pulses reflected in Figure 1. See, e.g., Final Act. 5-7; Adv. Act. 2; Ans. 13. Further, we appreciate that Cheng discloses changing various properties of a laser pulse to achieve different processing of different layers at the same target location in a work piece. See, e.g., Cheng ,r 11. However, as the Examiner acknowledges, pulse amplitude is not one of those properties. Adv. Act. 2. The Examiner has not provided any technical reasoning to establish why a person of ordinary skill in the art would have changed the pulse amplitudes, in addition to or in replacement of the various properties actually disclosed in Cheng, to achieve the differential processing disclosed by Cheng. See, e.g., Final Act. 5-7; Adv. Act. 2; Ans. 13. For the foregoing reasons, we do not sustain the Examiner's rejection of claim 1 as having been obvious over Gu and Cheng. The Examiner's additional consideration of dependent claims 2, 3, and 6 does not address the deficiencies as to independent claim 1 (see Final Act. 5-7, 10), so we likewise do not sustain the rejection of those claims as having been obvious over Gu and Cheng. D. Obviousness over Gu, Cheng, and Cordingley (Claims 4 and 5) The Examiner's additional consideration of dependent claims 4 and 5, and of Cordingley, does not address the deficiencies as to independent claim 1 discussed above. See Final Act. 7-9. Therefore, for the reasons provided above, we do not sustain the rejection of claims 4 and 5 as having been obvious over Gu, Cheng, and Cordingley. 13 Appeal2017-000225 Application 12/413,350 DECISION The Examiner's rejections are reversed. REVERSED 14 Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation