Skip to main content Skip to footer
HomeHome
 
  • Homepage
  • Searching for patents

    Patent knowledge

    Access our patent databases and search tools.

    Go to overview 

    • Overview
    • Technical information
      • Overview
      • Espacenet - patent search
      • European Publication Server
      • EP full-text search
    • Legal information
      • Overview
      • European Patent Register
      • European Patent Bulletin
      • European Case Law Identifier sitemap
      • Third-party observations
    • Business information
      • Overview
      • PATSTAT
      • IPscore
      • Technology insight reports
    • Data
      • Overview
      • Technology Intelligence Platform
      • Linked open EP data
      • Bulk data sets
      • Web services
      • Coverage, codes and statistics
    • Technology platforms
      • Overview
      • Digital agriculture
      • Plastics in transition
      • Water innovation
      • Space innovation
      • Technologies combatting cancer
      • Firefighting technologies
      • Clean energy technologies
      • Fighting coronavirus
    • Helpful resources
      • Overview
      • First time here?
      • Asian patent information
      • Patent information centres
      • Patent Translate
      • Patent Knowledge News
      • Business and statistics
      • Unitary Patent information in patent knowledge
    Image
    EPO TIR study-Agriculture-web-720 x 237

    Technology insight report on digital agriculture

  • Applying for a patent

    Applying for a patent

    Practical information on filing and grant procedures.

    Go to overview 

    • Overview
    • European route
      • Overview
      • European Patent Guide
      • Oppositions
      • Oral proceedings
      • Appeals
      • Unitary Patent & Unified Patent Court
      • National validation
      • Request for extension/validation
    • International route (PCT)
      • Overview
      • Euro-PCT Guide – PCT procedure at the EPO
      • EPO decisions and notices
      • PCT provisions and resources
      • Extension/validation request
      • Reinforced partnership programme
      • Accelerating your PCT application
      • Patent Prosecution Highway (PPH)
      • Training and events
    • National route
    • Find a professional representative
    • MyEPO services
      • Overview
      • Understand our services
      • Get access
      • File with us
      • Interact with us on your files
      • Online Filing & fee payment outages
    • Forms
      • Overview
      • Request for examination
    • Fees
      • Overview
      • European fees (EPC)
      • International fees (PCT)
      • Unitary Patent fees (UP)
      • Fee payment and refunds
      • Warning

    UP

    Find out how the Unitary Patent can enhance your IP strategy

  • Law & practice

    Law & practice

    European patent law, the Official Journal and other legal texts.

    Go to overview 

    • Overview
    • Legal texts
      • Overview
      • European Patent Convention
      • Official Journal
      • Guidelines
      • Extension / validation system
      • London Agreement
      • National law relating to the EPC
      • Unitary patent system
      • National measures relating to the Unitary Patent
    • Court practices
      • Overview
      • European Patent Judges' Symposium
    • User consultations
      • Overview
      • Ongoing consultations
      • Completed consultations
    • Substantive patent law harmonisation
      • Overview
      • The Tegernsee process
      • Group B+
    • Convergence of practice
    • Options for representatives
    Image
    Law and practice scales 720x237

    Keep up with key aspects of selected BoA decisions with our monthly "Abstracts of decisions”

  • News & events

    News & events

    Our latest news, podcasts and events, including the European Inventor Award.

    Go to overview 

     

    • Overview
    • News
    • Events
    • European Inventor Award
      • Overview
      • About the award
      • Categories and prizes
      • Meet the finalists
      • Nominations
      • European Inventor Network
      • The 2024 event
    • Young Inventors Prize
      • Overview
      • About the prize
      • Nominations
      • The jury
      • The world, reimagined
      • The 2025 event
    • Press centre
      • Overview
      • Patent Index and statistics
      • Search in press centre
      • Background information
      • Copyright
      • Press contacts
      • Call back form
      • Email alert service
    • Innovation and patenting in focus
      • Overview
      • CodeFest
      • Green tech in focus
      • Research institutes
      • Lifestyle
      • Space and satellites
      • The future of medicine
      • Materials science
      • Mobile communications
      • Biotechnology
      • Patent classification
      • Digital technologies
      • The future of manufacturing
      • Books by EPO experts
    • "Talk innovation" podcast

    Podcast

    From ideas to inventions: tune into our podcast for the latest in tech and IP

  • Learning

    Learning

    The European Patent Academy – the point of access to your learning

    Go to overview 

    • Overview
    • Learning activities and paths
      • Overview
      • Learning activities
      • Learning paths
    • EQE and EPAC
      • Overview
      • EQE - European qualifying examination
      • EPAC - European patent administration certification
      • CSP – Candidate Support Programme
    • Learning resources by area of interest
      • Overview
      • Patent granting
      • Technology transfer and dissemination
      • Patent enforcement and litigation
    • Learning resources by profile
      • Overview
      • Business and IP managers
      • EQE and EPAC Candidates
      • Judges, lawyers and prosecutors
      • National offices and IP authorities
      • Patent attorneys and paralegals
      • Universities, research centres and technology transfer centres (TTOs)
    Image
    Patent Academy catalogue

    Have a look at the extensive range of learning opportunities in the European Patent Academy training catalogue

  • About us

    About us

    Find out more about our work, values, history and vision

    Go to overview 

    • Overview
    • The EPO at a glance
    • 50 years of the EPC
      • Overview
      • Official celebrations
      • Member states’ video statements
      • 50 Leading Tech Voices
      • Athens Marathon
      • Kids’ collaborative art competition
    • Legal foundations and member states
      • Overview
      • Legal foundations
      • Member states of the European Patent Organisation
      • Extension states
      • Validation states
    • Administrative Council and subsidiary bodies
      • Overview
      • Communiqués
      • Calendar
      • Documents and publications
      • Administrative Council
    • Principles & strategy
      • Overview
      • Our mission, vision, values and corporate policy
      • Strategic Plan 2028
      • Towards a New Normal
    • Leadership & management
      • Overview
      • President António Campinos
      • Management Advisory Committee
    • Sustainability at the EPO
      • Overview
      • Environmental
      • Social
      • Governance and Financial sustainability
    • Services & activities
      • Overview
      • Our services & structure
      • Quality
      • Consulting our users
      • European and international co-operation
      • European Patent Academy
      • Chief Economist
      • Ombuds Office
      • Reporting wrongdoing
    • Observatory on Patents and Technology
      • Overview
      • Technologies
      • Innovation actors
      • Policy and funding
      • Tools
      • About the Observatory
    • Procurement
      • Overview
      • Procurement forecast
      • Doing business with the EPO
      • Procurement procedures
      • Sustainable Procurement Policy
      • About eTendering and electronic signatures
      • Procurement portal
      • Invoicing
      • General conditions
      • Archived tenders
    • Transparency portal
      • Overview
      • General
      • Human
      • Environmental
      • Organisational
      • Social and relational
      • Economic
      • Governance
    • Statistics and trends
      • Overview
      • Statistics & Trends Centre
      • Patent Index 2024
      • EPO Data Hub
      • Clarification on data sources
    • History
      • Overview
      • 1970s
      • 1980s
      • 1990s
      • 2000s
      • 2010s
      • 2020s
    • Art collection
      • Overview
      • The collection
      • Let's talk about art
      • Artists
      • Media library
      • What's on
      • Publications
      • Contact
      • Culture Space A&T 5-10
      • "Long Night"
    Image
    Patent Index 2024 keyvisual showing brightly lit up data chip, tinted in purple, bright blue

    Track the latest tech trends with our Patent Index

 
en de fr
  • Language selection
  • English
  • Deutsch
  • Français
Main navigation
  • Homepage
    • Go back
    • New to patents
  • New to patents
    • Go back
    • Overview
    • Your business and patents
    • Why do we have patents?
    • What's your big idea?
    • Are you ready?
    • What to expect
    • How to apply for a patent
    • Is it patentable?
    • Are you first?
    • Patent quiz
    • Unitary patent video
  • Searching for patents
    • Go back
    • Overview
    • Technical information
      • Go back
      • Overview
      • Espacenet - patent search
        • Go back
        • Overview
        • National patent office databases
        • Global Patent Index (GPI)
        • Release notes
      • European Publication Server
        • Go back
        • Overview
        • Release notes
        • Cross-reference index for Euro-PCT applications
        • EP authority file
        • Help
      • EP full-text search
    • Legal information
      • Go back
      • Overview
      • European Patent Register
        • Go back
        • Overview
        • Release notes archive
        • Register documentation
          • Go back
          • Overview
          • Deep link data coverage
          • Federated Register
          • Register events
      • European Patent Bulletin
        • Go back
        • Overview
        • Download Bulletin
        • EP Bulletin search
        • Help
      • European Case Law Identifier sitemap
      • Third-party observations
    • Business information
      • Go back
      • Overview
      • PATSTAT
      • IPscore
        • Go back
        • Release notes
      • Technology insight reports
    • Data
      • Go back
      • Overview
      • Technology Intelligence Platform
      • Linked open EP data
      • Bulk data sets
        • Go back
        • Overview
        • Manuals
        • Sequence listings
        • National full-text data
        • European Patent Register data
        • EPO worldwide bibliographic data (DOCDB)
        • EP full-text data
        • EPO worldwide legal event data (INPADOC)
        • EP bibliographic data (EBD)
        • Boards of Appeal decisions
      • Web services
        • Go back
        • Overview
        • Open Patent Services (OPS)
        • European Publication Server web service
      • Coverage, codes and statistics
        • Go back
        • Weekly updates
        • Updated regularly
    • Technology platforms
      • Go back
      • Overview
      • Digital agriculture
        • Go back
        • Overview
        • Plant agriculture
        • Artificial growth conditions
        • Livestock management
        • Supporting technologies
      • Plastics in transition
        • Go back
        • Overview
        • Plastics waste recovery
        • Plastics waste recycling
        • Alternative plastics
      • Innovation in water technologies
        • Go back
        • Overview
        • Clean water
        • Protection from water
      • Space innovation
        • Go back
        • Overview
        • Cosmonautics
        • Space observation
      • Technologies combatting cancer
        • Go back
        • Overview
        • Prevention and early detection
        • Diagnostics
        • Therapies
        • Wellbeing and aftercare
      • Firefighting technologies
        • Go back
        • Overview
        • Detection and prevention of fires
        • Fire extinguishing
        • Protective equipment
        • Post-fire restoration
      • Clean energy technologies
        • Go back
        • Overview
        • Renewable energy
        • Carbon-intensive industries
        • Energy storage and other enabling technologies
      • Fighting coronavirus
        • Go back
        • Overview
        • Vaccines and therapeutics
          • Go back
          • Overview
          • Vaccines
          • Overview of candidate therapies for COVID-19
          • Candidate antiviral and symptomatic therapeutics
          • Nucleic acids and antibodies to fight coronavirus
        • Diagnostics and analytics
          • Go back
          • Overview
          • Protein and nucleic acid assays
          • Analytical protocols
        • Informatics
          • Go back
          • Overview
          • Bioinformatics
          • Healthcare informatics
        • Technologies for the new normal
          • Go back
          • Overview
          • Devices, materials and equipment
          • Procedures, actions and activities
          • Digital technologies
        • Inventors against coronavirus
    • Helpful resources
      • Go back
      • Overview
      • First time here?
        • Go back
        • Overview
        • Basic definitions
        • Patent classification
          • Go back
          • Overview
          • Cooperative Patent Classification (CPC)
        • Patent families
          • Go back
          • Overview
          • DOCDB simple patent family
          • INPADOC extended patent family
        • Legal event data
          • Go back
          • Overview
          • INPADOC classification scheme
      • Asian patent information
        • Go back
        • Overview
        • China (CN)
          • Go back
          • Overview
          • Facts and figures
          • Grant procedure
          • Numbering system
          • Useful terms
          • Searching in databases
        • Chinese Taipei (TW)
          • Go back
          • Overview
          • Grant procedure
          • Numbering system
          • Useful terms
          • Searching in databases
        • India (IN)
          • Go back
          • Overview
          • Facts and figures
          • Grant procedure
          • Numbering system
        • Japan (JP)
          • Go back
          • Overview
          • Facts and figures
          • Grant procedure
          • Numbering system
          • Useful terms
          • Searching in databases
        • Korea (KR)
          • Go back
          • Overview
          • Facts and figures
          • Grant procedure
          • Numbering system
          • Useful terms
          • Searching in databases
        • Useful links
      • Patent information centres (PATLIB)
      • Patent Translate
      • Patent Knowledge News
      • Business and statistics
      • Unitary Patent information in patent knowledge
  • Applying for a patent
    • Go back
    • Overview
    • European route
      • Go back
      • Overview
      • European Patent Guide
      • Oppositions
      • Oral proceedings
        • Go back
        • Oral proceedings calendar
          • Go back
          • Calendar
          • Public access to appeal proceedings
          • Public access to opposition proceedings
          • Technical guidelines
      • Appeals
      • Unitary Patent & Unified Patent Court
        • Go back
        • Overview
        • Unitary Patent
          • Go back
          • Overview
          • Legal framework
          • Main features
          • Applying for a Unitary Patent
          • Cost of a Unitary Patent
          • Translation and compensation
          • Start date
          • Introductory brochures
        • Unified Patent Court
      • National validation
      • Extension/validation request
    • International route
      • Go back
      • Overview
      • Euro-PCT Guide
      • Entry into the European phase
      • Decisions and notices
      • PCT provisions and resources
      • Extension/validation request
      • Reinforced partnership programme
      • Accelerating your PCT application
      • Patent Prosecution Highway (PPH)
        • Go back
        • Patent Prosecution Highway (PPH) programme outline
      • Training and events
    • National route
    • MyEPO services
      • Go back
      • Overview
      • Understand our services
        • Go back
        • Overview
        • Exchange data with us using an API
          • Go back
          • Release notes
      • Get access
        • Go back
        • Overview
        • Release notes
      • File with us
        • Go back
        • Overview
        • What if our online filing services are down?
        • Release notes
      • Interact with us on your files
        • Go back
        • Release notes
      • Online Filing & fee payment outages
    • Fees
      • Go back
      • Overview
      • European fees (EPC)
        • Go back
        • Overview
        • Decisions and notices
      • International fees (PCT)
        • Go back
        • Reduction in fees
        • Fees for international applications
        • Decisions and notices
        • Overview
      • Unitary Patent fees (UP)
        • Go back
        • Overview
        • Decisions and notices
      • Fee payment and refunds
        • Go back
        • Overview
        • Payment methods
        • Getting started
        • FAQs and other documentation
        • Technical information for batch payments
        • Decisions and notices
        • Release notes
      • Warning
    • Forms
      • Go back
      • Overview
      • Request for examination
    • Find a professional representative
  • Law & practice
    • Go back
    • Overview
    • Legal texts
      • Go back
      • Overview
      • European Patent Convention
        • Go back
        • Overview
        • Archive
          • Go back
          • Overview
          • Documentation on the EPC revision 2000
            • Go back
            • Overview
            • Diplomatic Conference for the revision of the EPC
            • Travaux préparatoires
            • New text
            • Transitional provisions
            • Implementing regulations to the EPC 2000
            • Rules relating to Fees
            • Ratifications and accessions
          • Travaux Préparatoires EPC 1973
      • Official Journal
      • Guidelines
        • Go back
        • Overview
        • EPC Guidelines
        • PCT-EPO Guidelines
        • Unitary Patent Guidelines
        • Guidelines revision cycle
        • Consultation results
        • Summary of user responses
        • Archive
      • Extension / validation system
      • London Agreement
      • National law relating to the EPC
        • Go back
        • Overview
        • Archive
      • Unitary Patent system
        • Go back
        • Travaux préparatoires to UP and UPC
      • National measures relating to the Unitary Patent 
      • International treaties
    • Court practices
      • Go back
      • Overview
      • European Patent Judges' Symposium
    • User consultations
      • Go back
      • Overview
      • Ongoing consultations
      • Completed consultations
    • Substantive patent law harmonisation
      • Go back
      • Overview
      • The Tegernsee process
      • Group B+
    • Convergence of practice
    • Options for representatives
  • News & events
    • Go back
    • Overview
    • News
    • Events
    • European Inventor Award
      • Go back
      • Overview
      • About the award
      • Categories and prizes
      • Meet the inventors
      • Nominations
      • European Inventor Network
        • Go back
        • Overview
        • 2026 activities
        • 2025 activities
        • 2024 activities
        • Rules and criteria
        • FAQ
      • The 2024 event
    • Young Inventors Prize
      • Go back
      • Overview
      • About the prize
      • Nominations
      • The jury
      • The world, reimagined
      • The 2025 event
    • Press centre
      • Go back
      • Overview
      • Patent Index and statistics
      • Search in press centre
      • Background information
        • Go back
        • Overview
        • European Patent Office
        • Q&A on patents related to coronavirus
        • Q&A on plant patents
      • Copyright
      • Press contacts
      • Call back form
      • Email alert service
    • In focus
      • Go back
      • Overview
      • CodeFest
        • Go back
        • CodeFest 2026 on patent and IP portfolio (e)valuation
        • CodeFest Spring 2025 on classifying patent data for sustainable development
        • Overview
        • CodeFest 2024 on generative AI
        • CodeFest 2023 on Green Plastics
      • Green tech in focus
        • Go back
        • Overview
        • About green tech
        • Renewable energies
        • Energy transition technologies
        • Building a greener future
      • Research institutes
      • Lifestyle
      • Space and satellites
        • Go back
        • Overview
        • Patents and space technologies
      • Healthcare
        • Go back
        • Overview
        • Medical technologies and cancer
        • Future of medicine: Personalised medicine
      • Materials science
        • Go back
        • Overview
        • Nanotechnology
      • Mobile communications
      • Biotechnology
        • Go back
        • Overview
        • Red, white or green
        • The role of the EPO
        • What is patentable?
        • Biotech inventors
      • Classification
        • Go back
        • Overview
        • Nanotechnology
        • Climate change mitigation technologies
          • Go back
          • Overview
          • External partners
          • Updates on Y02 and Y04S
      • Digital technologies
        • Go back
        • Overview
        • About ICT
        • Hardware and software
        • Artificial intelligence
        • Fourth Industrial Revolution
      • Additive manufacturing
        • Go back
        • Overview
        • About AM
        • AM innovation
      • Books by EPO experts
    • Podcast
  • Learning
    • Go back
    • Overview
    • Learning activities and paths
      • Go back
      • Overview
      • Learning activities: types and formats
      • Learning paths
    • EQE and EPAC
      • Go back
      • Overview
      • EQE - European Qualifying Examination
        • Go back
        • Overview
        • Compendium
          • Go back
          • Overview
          • Paper F
          • Paper A
          • Paper B
          • Paper C
          • Paper D
          • Pre-examination
        • Candidates successful in the European qualifying examination
        • Archive
      • EPAC - European patent administration certification
      • CSP – Candidate Support Programme
    • Learning resources by area of interest
      • Go back
      • Overview
      • Patent granting
      • Technology transfer and dissemination
      • Patent enforcement and litigation
    • Learning resources by profile
      • Go back
      • Overview
      • Business and IP managers
        • Go back
        • Overview
        • Innovation case studies
          • Go back
          • Overview
          • SME case studies
          • Technology transfer case studies
          • High-growth technology case studies
        • Inventor's handbook
          • Go back
          • Overview
          • Introduction
          • Disclosure and confidentiality
          • Novelty and prior art
          • Competition and market potential
          • Assessing the risk ahead
          • Proving the invention
          • Protecting your idea
          • Building a team and seeking funding
          • Business planning
          • Finding and approaching companies
          • Dealing with companies
        • Best of search matters
          • Go back
          • Overview
          • Tools and databases
          • EPO procedures and initiatives
          • Search strategies
          • Challenges and specific topics
        • Support for high-growth technology businesses
          • Go back
          • Overview
          • Business decision-makers
          • IP professionals
          • Stakeholders of the Innovation Ecosystem
      • EQE and EPAC Candidates
        • Go back
        • Overview
        • Paper F brain-teasers
        • European qualifying examination - Guide for preparation
        • EPAC
      • Judges, lawyers and prosecutors
        • Go back
        • Overview
        • Compulsory licensing in Europe
        • The jurisdiction of European courts in patent disputes
      • National offices and IP authorities
        • Go back
        • Overview
        • Learning material for examiners of national officers
        • Learning material for formalities officers and paralegals
      • Patent attorneys and paralegals
      • Universities, research centres and TTOs
        • Go back
        • Overview
        • Modular IP Education Framework (MIPEF)
        • Pan-European Seal Young Professionals Programme
          • Go back
          • Overview
          • For students
          • For universities
            • Go back
            • Overview
            • IP education resources
            • University memberships
          • Our young professionals
          • Professional development plan
        • Academic Research Programme
          • Go back
          • Overview
          • Completed research projects
          • Current research projects
        • IP Teaching Kit
          • Go back
          • Overview
          • Download modules
        • Intellectual property course design manual
        • PATLIB Knowledge Transfer to Africa
          • Go back
          • Core activities
          • Stories and insights
  • About us
    • Go back
    • Overview
    • The EPO at a glance
    • 50 years of the EPC
      • Go back
      • Official celebrations
      • Overview
      • Member states’ video statements
        • Go back
        • Albania
        • Austria
        • Belgium
        • Bulgaria
        • Croatia
        • Cyprus
        • Czech Republic
        • Denmark
        • Estonia
        • Finland
        • France
        • Germany
        • Greece
        • Hungary
        • Iceland
        • Ireland
        • Italy
        • Latvia
        • Liechtenstein
        • Lithuania
        • Luxembourg
        • Malta
        • Monaco
        • Montenegro
        • Netherlands
        • North Macedonia
        • Norway
        • Poland
        • Portugal
        • Romania
        • San Marino
        • Serbia
        • Slovakia
        • Slovenia
        • Spain
        • Sweden
        • Switzerland
        • Türkiye
        • United Kingdom
      • 50 Leading Tech Voices
      • Athens Marathon
      • Kids’ collaborative art competition
    • Legal foundations and member states
      • Go back
      • Overview
      • Legal foundations
      • Member states
        • Go back
        • Overview
        • Member states by date of accession
      • Extension states
      • Validation states
    • Administrative Council and subsidiary bodies
      • Go back
      • Overview
      • Communiqués
        • Go back
        • 2024
        • Overview
        • 2023
        • 2022
        • 2021
        • 2020
        • 2019
        • 2018
        • 2017
        • 2016
        • 2015
        • 2014
        • 2013
      • Calendar
      • Documents and publications
      • Administrative Council
        • Go back
        • Overview
        • Composition
        • Representatives
        • Rules of Procedure
        • Board of Auditors
        • Secretariat
        • Council bodies
    • Principles & strategy
      • Go back
      • Overview
      • Mission, vision, values & corporate policy
      • Strategic Plan 2028
        • Go back
        • Driver 1: People
        • Driver 2: Technologies
        • Driver 3: High-quality, timely products and services
        • Driver 4: Partnerships
        • Driver 5: Financial sustainability
      • Towards a New Normal
      • Data protection & privacy notice
    • Leadership & management
      • Go back
      • Overview
      • About the President
      • Management Advisory Committee
    • Sustainability at the EPO
      • Go back
      • Overview
      • Environmental
        • Go back
        • Overview
        • Inspiring environmental inventions
      • Social
        • Go back
        • Overview
        • Inspiring social inventions
      • Governance and Financial sustainability
    • Procurement
      • Go back
      • Overview
      • Procurement forecast
      • Doing business with the EPO
      • Procurement procedures
      • Dynamic Purchasing System (DPS) publications
      • Sustainable Procurement Policy
      • About eTendering
      • Invoicing
      • Procurement portal
        • Go back
        • Overview
        • e-Signing contracts
      • General conditions
      • Archived tenders
    • Services & activities
      • Go back
      • Overview
      • Our services & structure
      • Quality
        • Go back
        • Overview
        • Foundations
          • Go back
          • Overview
          • European Patent Convention
          • Guidelines for examination
          • Our staff
        • Enabling quality
          • Go back
          • Overview
          • Prior art
          • Classification
          • Tools
          • Processes
        • Products & services
          • Go back
          • Overview
          • Search
          • Examination
          • Opposition
          • Continuous improvement
        • Quality through networking
          • Go back
          • Overview
          • User engagement
          • Co-operation
          • User satisfaction survey
          • Stakeholder Quality Assurance Panels
        • Patent Quality Charter
        • Quality Action Plan
        • Quality dashboard
        • Statistics
          • Go back
          • Overview
          • Search
          • Examination
          • Opposition
        • Integrated management at the EPO
      • Consulting our users
        • Go back
        • Overview
        • Standing Advisory Committee before the EPO (SACEPO)
          • Go back
          • Overview
          • Objectives
          • SACEPO and its working parties
          • Meetings
          • Single Access Portal – SACEPO Area
        • Surveys
          • Go back
          • Overview
          • Detailed methodology
          • Search services
          • Examination services, final actions and publication
          • Opposition services
          • Formalities services
          • Customer services
          • Filing services
          • Key Account Management (KAM)
          • Website
          • Archive
      • Our user service charter
      • European and international co-operation
        • Go back
        • Overview
        • Co-operation with member states
          • Go back
          • Overview
        • Bilateral co-operation with non-member states
          • Go back
          • Overview
          • Validation system
          • Reinforced Partnership programme
        • Multilateral international co-operation with IP offices and organisations
        • Co-operation with international organisations outside the IP system
      • European Patent Academy
        • Go back
        • Overview
        • Partners
      • Chief Economist
        • Go back
        • Overview
        • Economic studies
      • Ombuds Office
      • Reporting wrongdoing
    • Observatory on Patents and Technology
      • Go back
      • Overview
      • Technologies
        • Go back
        • Overview
        • Innovation against cancer
        • Assistive robotics
        • Energy enabling technologies
          • Go back
          • Overview
          • Publications
        • Energy generation technologies
        • Water technologies
        • Plastics in transition
        • Space technologies
        • Digital agriculture
      • Innovation actors
        • Go back
        • Overview
        • Startups and SMEs
          • Go back
          • Overview
          • Publications
        • Research universities and public research organisations
        • Women inventors
      • Policy and funding
        • Go back
        • Overview
        • Financing innovation programme
          • Go back
          • Overview
          • Our studies on the financing of innovation
          • EPO initiatives for patent applicants
          • Financial support for innovators in Europe
        • Patents and standards
          • Go back
          • Overview
          • Publications
          • Patent standards explorer
      • Tools
        • Go back
        • Overview
        • Deep Tech Finder
      • About the Observatory
        • Go back
        • Overview
        • Work plan
        • Collaboration with European actors
    • Transparency portal
      • Go back
      • Overview
      • General
        • Go back
        • Overview
        • Annual Review 2024
          • Go back
          • Overview
          • Executive summary
          • Driver 1 – People
          • Driver 2 – Technologies
          • Driver 3 – High-quality, timely products and services
          • Driver 4 – Partnerships
          • Driver 5 – Financial Sustainability
        • Annual Review 2023
          • Go back
          • Overview
          • Foreword
          • Executive summary
          • 50 years of the EPC
          • Strategic key performance indicators
          • Goal 1: Engaged and empowered
          • Goal 2: Digital transformation
          • Goal 3: Master quality
          • Goal 4: Partner for positive impact
          • Goal 5: Secure sustainability
        • Annual Review 2022
          • Go back
          • Overview
          • Foreword
          • Executive summary
          • Goal 1: Engaged and empowered
          • Goal 2: Digital transformation
          • Goal 3: Master quality
          • Goal 4: Partner for positive impact
          • Goal 5: Secure sustainability
      • Human
      • Environmental
      • Organisational
      • Social and relational
      • Economic
      • Governance
    • Statistics and trends
      • Go back
      • Overview
      • Statistics & Trends Centre
      • Patent Index 2024
        • Go back
        • Insight into computer technology and AI
        • Insight into clean energy technologies
        • Statistics and indicators
          • Go back
          • European patent applications
            • Go back
            • Key trend
            • Origin
            • Top 10 technical fields
              • Go back
              • Computer technology
              • Electrical machinery, apparatus, energy
              • Digital communication
              • Medical technology
              • Transport
              • Measurement
              • Biotechnology
              • Pharmaceuticals
              • Other special machines
              • Organic fine chemistry
            • All technical fields
          • Applicants
            • Go back
            • Top 50
            • Categories
            • Women inventors
          • Granted patents
            • Go back
            • Key trend
            • Origin
            • Designations
      • Data to download
      • EPO Data Hub
      • Clarification on data sources
    • History
      • Go back
      • Overview
      • 1970s
      • 1980s
      • 1990s
      • 2000s
      • 2010s
      • 2020s
    • Art collection
      • Go back
      • Overview
      • The collection
      • Let's talk about art
      • Artists
      • Media library
      • What's on
      • Publications
      • Contact
      • Culture Space A&T 5-10
        • Go back
        • Overview
        • Catalyst lab & Deep vision
          • Go back
          • Overview
          • Irene Sauter (DE)
          • AVPD (DK)
          • Jan Robert Leegte (NL)
          • Jānis Dzirnieks (LV) #1
          • Jānis Dzirnieks (LV) #2
          • Péter Szalay (HU)
          • Thomas Feuerstein (AT)
          • Tom Burr (US)
          • Wolfgang Tillmans (DE)
          • TerraPort
          • Unfinished Sculpture - Captives #1
          • Deep vision – immersive exhibition
          • Previous exhibitions
        • The European Patent Journey
        • Sustaining life. Art in the climate emergency
        • Next generation statements
        • Open storage
        • Cosmic bar
      • "Long Night"
  • Boards of Appeal
    • Go back
    • Overview
    • Decisions of the Boards of Appeal
      • Go back
      • Overview
      • Recent decisions
      • Selected decisions
    • Information from the Boards of Appeal
    • Procedure
    • Oral proceedings
    • About the Boards of Appeal
      • Go back
      • Overview
      • President of the Boards of Appeal
      • Enlarged Board of Appeal
        • Go back
        • Overview
        • Pending referrals (Art. 112 EPC)
        • Decisions and opinions (Art. 112 EPC)
        • Pending petitions for review (Art. 112a EPC)
        • Decisions on petitions for review (Art. 112a EPC)
      • Technical Boards of Appeal
      • Legal Board of Appeal
      • Disciplinary Board of Appeal
      • Presidium
        • Go back
        • Overview
    • Code of Conduct
    • Business distribution scheme
      • Go back
      • Overview
      • Technical boards of appeal by IPC in 2025
      • Archive
    • Annual list of cases
    • Communications
    • Annual reports
      • Go back
      • Overview
    • Publications
      • Go back
      • Abstracts of decisions
    • Case Law of the Boards of Appeal
      • Go back
      • Overview
      • Archive
  • Service & support
    • Go back
    • Overview
    • Website updates
    • Availability of online services
      • Go back
      • Overview
    • FAQ
      • Go back
      • Overview
    • Publications
    • Ordering
      • Go back
      • Overview
      • Patent Knowledge Products and Services
      • Terms and conditions
        • Go back
        • Overview
        • Patent information products
        • Bulk data sets
        • Open Patent Services (OPS)
        • Fair use charter
    • Procedural communications
    • Useful links
      • Go back
      • Overview
      • Patent offices of member states
      • Other patent offices
      • Directories of patent attorneys
      • Patent databases, registers and gazettes
      • Disclaimer
    • Contact us
      • Go back
      • Overview
      • Filing options
      • Locations
    • Subscription centre
      • Go back
      • Overview
      • Subscribe
      • Change preferences
      • Unsubscribe
    • Official holidays
    • Glossary
    • RSS feeds
Board of Appeals
Decisions

Recent decisions

Overview
  • 2025 decisions
  • 2024 decisions
  • 2023 decisions
  1. Home
  2. T 1288/01 26-03-2004
Facebook X Linkedin Email

T 1288/01 26-03-2004

European Case Law Identifier
ECLI:EP:BA:2004:T128801.20040326
Date of decision
26 March 2004
Case number
T 1288/01
Petition for review of
-
Application number
92908695.7
IPC class
C08F 6/28
Language of proceedings
EN
Distribution
DISTRIBUTED TO BOARD CHAIRMEN (C)

Download and more information:

Decision in EN 56.47 KB
Documentation of the appeal procedure can be found in the European Patent Register
Bibliographic information is available in:
EN
Versions
Unpublished
Application title

Method of improving the oxidative thermal stability of ethylene polymers

Applicant name
THE DOW CHEMICAL COMPANY
Opponent name
E.I. Du Pont de Nemours & Company, Inc.
Board
3.3.03
Headnote
-
Relevant legal provisions
European Patent Convention Art 83 1973
European Patent Convention Art 100(b) 1973
Keywords
Sufficiency of disclosure (no)
Catchword
-
Cited decisions
G 0004/95
T 0805/93
T 0172/99
Citing decisions
T 1053/05
T 0068/07

I. The grant of the European patent No. 0 527 225 in the name of The Dow Chemical Company in respect of European patent application No. 92 908 695.7, filed on 4 March 1992 and claiming priority of the US patent application No. 663995 filed on 4 March 1991 was announced on 28 January 1998 (Bulletin 1998/05) on the basis of 20 claims.

Claims 1 to 20 read as follows:

"1. A method of improving the taste and odor properties and the oxidative thermal stability of a first thermoplastic ethylene polymer, characterized by removing residual unreacted monomer or monomers, solvent and thermally unstable species from first ethylene polymer, thereby forming a second more oxidatively thermally stable ethylene polymer having an oxidative exotherm of not more than 50 percent of the oxidative exotherm of the first polymer, as measured by differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) wherein the thermal activity at 10°C per minute from room temperature to 300°C was determined in the presence of oxygen using DSC reference chambers and calculated in joules per gram, which method comprises the melting of the polymer, mixing the molten polymer with at least one stripping agent and devolatilizing the mixture of the molten first polymer and the stripping agent.

2. The method of Claim 1 wherein the first ethylene polymer is low density polyethylene.

3. The method of Claim 1 wherein the first ethylene polymer is linear polyethylene.

4. The method of Claim 3 wherein the linear polyethylene is linear low density polyethylene.

5. The method of Claim 3 wherein the linear polyethylene is linear high density polyethylene.

6. The method of Claim 1 wherein the first ethylene polymer is an interpolymer of ethylene and at least one ethylenically unsaturated carboxylic acid.

7. The method of Claim 6 wherein the unsaturated carboxylic acid is acrylic acid.

8. The method of Claim 6 wherein the unsaturated carboxylic acid is methacrylic acid.

9. The oxidatively thermally stable polymer obtainable by the method of any of Claims 2-8.

10. The method of Claim 1 wherein the first ethylene polymer is extruded through a devolatilization extruder equipped with at least one devolatilization zone.

11. The method of Claim 10 further comprising the consecutive steps of:

(a) feeding the first ethylene polymer to an extruder comprising an optional stripping agent injection zone, an optional confined mixing zone, at least a first partially filled vacuum zone, at least a first stripping agent injection zone, at least one first confined mixing zone, at least a second partially filled vacuum zone;

(b) melting the first ethylene polymer;

(c) applying vacuum to the first partially filled vacuum zone;

(d) cocurrently injecting at least 0.1 percent by weight based on total ethylene polymer feed of at least one stripping agent to the first stripping agent injection zone;

(e) mixing the stripping agent with the first ethylene polymer in the first confined mixing zone;

(f) applying vacuum to the second partially filled vacuum zone; and

(g) recovering the second more oxidatively thermally stable ethylene polymer.

12. The method of Claim 11 wherein step (a) immediately follows a homopolymerization reaction of ethylene.

13. The method of Claim 11 wherein step (a) immediately follows an interpolymerization reaction of ethylene with at least one other comonomer.

14. The method of Claim 13 wherein the comonomer is acrylic acid or methacrylic acid.

15. The method of Claim 11 wherein each vacuum zone of the extruder has a specific surface renewal ratio of 0.91. kg (two pounds) per square meter or less.

16. The method of Claim 14 wherein the stripping agent is at least one chosen from the group consisting of light hydrocarbons, water, aqueous solutions of metal hydroxides, nitrogenous bases, water-soluble strong base organic amines, steam, alcohol, carbon dioxide and nitrogen.

17. The method of Claim 16 wherein the stripping agent is an aqueous solution of sodium hydroxide, thereby forming a more oxidatively thermally stable ionomer.

18. The ionomer obtainable by the method of Claim 17.

19. A multilayered film structure having an inner layer and an outer layer, at least one layer of which comprises the oxidatively thermally stable polymer of Claim 9.

20. A multilayered film structure having an inner layer and an outer layer, at least one layer of which comprises the ionomer of Claim 18."

II. On 28 October 1998 a Notice of Opposition was filed by E.I. Du Pont de Nemours and Company in which revocation of the patent in its entirety was requested on the grounds of lack of novelty and lack of inventive step (Article 100(a) EPC and insufficiency of disclosure (Article 100(b) EPC).

During the opposition proceedings, the Parties relied, inter alia on the following documents:

D16: Experimental Report I, "Determination of the Validity of the DSC test used to calculate the oxidative Exotherm in EP-B-0527225", submitted by the Opponent with letter of 2 August 2001;

D19: W. W. Wendlandt, "Thermal Analysis", 3rd Edition, Vol.19 of Chemical Analysis, A Wiley-Interscience Publication, John Wiley & Sons, 1986, pages 114- 115, 345-357;

D20: J. C. Tou et al, "A Cradle-Glass Ampoule Sample Container for Differential Scanning Calorimetric Analysis", Thermochimica Acta, Elsevier Scientific Publishing Company, Amsterdam, Vol. 42, 1980, pages 21-34;

D21: L. F. Whiting et al, "Evaluation of a Capillary Tube Sample Container for Differential Scanning Calorimetry", Thermochimica Acta, Elsevier Science Publishers B.V., Amsterdam, Vol. 136, 1988, pages 231-245;

D22: W. W. Wendlandt, "Thermal Analysis", 3rd Edition, Vol.19 of Chemical Analysis, A Wiley-Interscience Publication, John Wiley & Sons, 1986, pages 320- 325;

D23: J. Chiu, "Calorimetric Studies of Chemical Reactions Using a Thermal Micro-Reactor", Thermochimica Acta, Elsevier Scientific Publishing Company, Amsterdam, Vol. 26 (1978), pages 57-65;

D24: J. Chiu, "Thermal Analysis"; Chihara Ed., 1977, pages 228-229;

D25: J. Chiu, "Dynamic Thermal Analysis of Polymers. An Overview", J. Macromol. Sci. Chem., 1974, Vol A8(1) pages 3-23;

D26: H. W. Hoyer, "Thermal Analysis in Sealed Tubes: Inorganic, Organic and Biochemical Reactions", Thermal Analysis: Comparative studies on Materials, Kambe and Garn Ed. 1974, pages 65-73;

D27: J. Chiu, "A Dynamic Differential Calorimetric Technique for Measuring Heats of Polymerization", Analytical Calorimetry, R. S. Porter and Julian F. Johnson Ed. 1970; pages 171-183;

D28: G. R. Taylor et al., "A sealed glass ampoule for use with a commercial differential scanning calorimeter", Analytica Chimica Acta, Elsevier Publishing Company, Amsterdam, Vol. 53 (1971), pages 452-455;

D29: E. J. Barett et al, "Differential Thermal Analysis with Capillary Tubes", Mikrochimica Acta (Wien) Springer Verlag 1970; pages 1121-1134; and

D30: ASTM D 3895-95 "Standard Test Method for Oxidative- Induction Time of Polyolefins by Differential Scanning Calorimetry."

III. By a decision issued announced orally on 2 October 2001 and issued in writing on 16 October 2001, the Opposition Division revoked the patent. The decision was based on Claims 1 to 20 as granted as main request, on Claims 1 to 19 filed with letter of 2 August 2001, on Claims 1 to 18 filed with letter of 2 August 2001 and on Claims 1 to 18 filed with letter of 15 June 1999, representing respectively a first, a second and a third auxiliary request.

Claim 1 of the first auxiliary request differed from Claim 1 of the main request, in that the features of Claim 10 of the main request had been incorporated therein. Claims 2 to 9, and 10 (apart the change of the wording "cocurrently" into "concurrently" in step (d) in Claim 10) to 19 corresponded to Claims 2 to 9 and 11 to 20 of the main request, respectively.

Claim 1 of the second auxiliary request differed from Claim 1 of the first auxiliary request in that the features of Claim 10 thereof had been incorporated therein. Claims 2 to 9, and 10 to 18 corresponded to Claims 2 to 9, and 11 to 19 of the first auxiliary request, respectively.

Claim 1 of the third auxiliary read as follows:

"1. A method of improving the taste and odor properties and the oxidative thermal stability of a first thermoplastic ethylene polymer, characterized by removing residual unreacted monomer or monomers, solvent and thermally unstable species from first ethylene polymer, thereby forming a second more oxidatively thermally stable ethylene polymer having an oxidative exotherm of not more than 50 percent of the oxidative exotherm of the first polymer, as measured by differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) wherein the thermal activity at 10°C per minute from room temperature to 300°C was determined in the presence of oxygen using DSC reference chambers and calculated in joules per gram, which method comprises the consecutive steps of:

(a) feeding the first ethylene polymer to an extruder comprising an optional stripping agent injection zone, an optional confined mixing zone, at least one first vacuum zone, at least one first stripping agent injection zone, at least one first confined mixing zone, at least one second vacuum zone; wherein the at least one confined mixing zone is situated at or immediately downstream of the stripping agent injection zone, the first vacuum zone is situated downstream of the at least one stripping agent injection zone and the confined mixing zone, and the second vacuum zone is situated downstream of the first vacuum zone;

(b) conveying the polymer through the extruder to partially fill the first vacuum zone;

(c) applying vacuum to the first vacuum zone;

(d) concurrently injecting at least 0.1 percent by weight based on total ethylene polymer feed of at least one inert stripping agent into the at least one stripping agent zone;

(e) conveying the polymer and the stripping agent through the extruder into the confined mixing zone and mixing the polymer and the stripping agent in the at least one confined mixing zone;

(f) conveying the polymer and the stripping agent mixture through the extruder into the second vacuum zone and applying vacuum to the second vacuum zone; and

(g) recovering the extruded ethylene polymer."

Claims 2 to 8 corresponded to Claims 2 to 18 of the second auxiliary request.

IV. In its decision, the Opposition Division held that the patent in suit did not disclose the invention in a manner sufficiently clear and complete for it to be carried out by the skilled person.

The decision stated that Claim 1 of all requests included the feature:

"by removing residual unreacted monomer or monomers, solvent and thermally unstable species from first ethylene polymer, thereby forming a second more oxidatively thermally stable ethylene polymer having an oxidative exotherm of not more than 50 percent of the oxidative exotherm of the first polymer, as measured by differential scanning calorimetry, wherein the thermal activity at 10°C per minute from room temperature to 300°C was determined in the presence of oxygen using DSC reference chambers and calculated in joules per gram, ...".

The decision held that the experimental report referred to as D16 submitted by the Opponent showed that the duration of the cooling step was critical for the determination of the oxidative exotherm. The argument of the Patent Proprietor that these tests were not pertinent since the cooling step had not been performed with a cold finger was not accepted. The decision held that the patent in suit did not disclose that the cooling step must be carried out using a cold finger and not by immersion in liquid nitrogen. Both methods were used in the art (cf. D27).

The decision further stated that none of the documents D19 to D26 and D28 to D29 disclosed a standard procedure for the measurement of oxidative exotherm. Thus, the Opposition Division came to the conclusion that, without the precise experimental details of the measurement by DSC such as the experimental apparatus and the duration of the cooling time, the person skilled in the art would not able to achieve and determine the oxidative exotherm.

V. A Notice of Appeal was filed on 14 December 2001 by the Appellant (Patent Proprietor) with simultaneous payment of the requested fee. With the Statement of Grounds of Appeal filed on 25 February 2002, the Appellant submitted the following document:

D31: Bretherick's Handbook of Reactive Chemical Hazards; Butterworth Heinemann, Fourth Edition, 1990, pages 1346-1347.

It also argued essentially as follows:

(i) The Opposition Division had applied an inappropriate standard for determining sufficiency of disclosure.

(ii) The teaching in a patent was to be supplemented by the general knowledge of the person skilled in the art.

(iii) Document D27 did not disclose that both immersion in liquid nitrogen and the use of a cold finger were known and used in the art.

(iv) From the passage at page 7 of the patent (i.e Section titled Differential Scanning Calorimetry), the skilled person could only understand that the cold finger technique was used.

(v) As stated by the Opposition Division, the cold finger technique was known in the art.

(vi) Sealing the ampoule by direct immersion in liquid nitrogen would be dangerous and inappropriate. Furthermore, the cold finger technique reduced the oxygen condensation in the ampoule.

(vii) When using the cold finger technique, the effect of the immersion time was negligible. This was shown by the experimental data in Tables I and II (cf. pages 9 and 10 of the Statement of Grounds of Appeal) concerning the alleged influence of cooling time (e.g. cooling times of 20 seconds and of 5 minutes) on the oxidative exotherm.

VI. With its letter dated 8 November 2002, the Respondent submitted the following document:

D32: Affidavit of Dr M. Y. Keating, dated 28 October 2002.

It also argued essentially as follows:

(i) The insufficiency was that there was no way of determining the meaning of reduction of oxidative exotherm since this feature depended on parameters not disclosed in the patent specification.

(ii) Concerning the cooling method of the sealed ampoule, the specification of the patent did not exclude the immersion in liquid nitrogen.

(iii) The sealed ampoule thermal analysis was not a routine method and was used only rarely. As stated in the Affidavit of Dr Keating, the skilled person would not know how to conduct the measurement in the absence of detailed instruction.

(iv) There was no standard method for the determination of oxidative exotherm.

(v) Document D27 taught that cooling with a cold finger was an alternative to cooling by immersion.

(vi) The danger of explosion was very minor. The analyses of the Opponent involving immersion cooling were conducted satisfactorily.

(vii) Contrary to the submissions of the Appellant, the condensation of oxygen was inherently desirable in order to ensure the reliability of the data.

(viii) The value of the oxidative exotherm would be independent of the cooling methods provided there was a stoichiometric amount or excess of oxygen in the ampoule.

(ix) Concerning the duration of the cooling step, the results presented by the Appellant with the Statement of Grounds of Appeal showed a large standard deviation.

(x) There was however no mention of whether the oxidative exotherms had been determined before or after treatment. If the standard deviations of the tests before and after treatment overlapped, this might imply that insufficient combustion had taken place, and would explain the low variability between the 20 seconds and the 5 minutes data.

VII. With its letter dated 30 January 2004, the Appellant submitted the following documents:

D33: Affidavit of Dr J. C. Oxley, dated 29 January 2004;

D34: L. F. Whiting et al. "Evaluation of a Capillary Tube Sample Container for Differential Scanning Calorimetry"; Proceedings of the sixteenth North American Thermal Analysis Society Conference, September 27-30, 1987, Washington, D.C.; pages 394- 399; and

D35: M. Y. Keating et al. "Low Temperature Specific Heats of Polystyrenes and Ethylene-Vinylacetate Copolymers", Proceedings of the sixteenth North American Thermal Analysis Society Conference, September 27-30, 1987, Washington, D.C.; pages 22- 27.

It informed the Board that it would be accompanied by Dr J. C. Oxley as a technical expert at the oral proceedings scheduled on 26 March 2004.

The Appellant argued essentially that the Affidavit of Dr Oxley made clear that the person skilled in the art would realize that the patent pointed him to the cold finger method.

VIII. With its letter dated 28 January 2004, the Respondent informed the Board that it would be accompanied by Dr M. Y. Keating as a technical expert at the oral proceedings.

IX. Oral proceedings were held on 26 March 2004.

At the oral proceedings the discussion focussed on the influence of the cooling method and of the cooling time on the value of the oxidative exotherm and, more generally, on the reliability of the test for determining the oxidative exotherm.

(a) The submissions of the Appellant may be summarized as follows:

(i) The aim of the claimed process was to reduce not only the amount of volatile components such as solvents, diluents or residual monomers but, moreover, the amount of thermally unstable species (referred to as semi-volatiles) which could cause taste problems.

(ii) While the volatile content might be easily determined by analytical techniques such as high performance liquid chromatography or gas chromatography, these techniques did not provide information on the content of semi-volatiles. Such information could however be provided by the determination of the oxidative exotherm as defined in the patent in suit.

(iii) In that respect, Table 4 and Table 8 of the patent in suit showed that there was no linear correlation between the amount of volatile component and the value of oxidative exotherm.

(iv) The crucial point of the decision of the Opposition Division was based on the assumption, in view of the experimental data submitted by the Opponent (cf. D16) that the value of the oxidative exotherm was dependent on the duration of the cooling step.

(v) In that respect, if one directly compared the average values of the exotherm obtained using different cooling time as disclosed in D16, one would get an average of value of 16. J/g (relative standard deviation 53%) at 2 minute cooling time and an average value of 16 J/g at 5 minute cooling time (relative standard deviation 85%) before purification treatment and, after purification, an average value of 12 J/g (relative standard deviation 40%) at 2 minute cooling time and an average value of 25 J/g (relative standard deviation 100%) with a 5 minute cooling time.

(vi) However, in view of the obvious outlying data from the values reported in Table 1 of D16 (i.e. the value 48 J/g for the 5 minute cooling time before treatment, and the values 30, 39, 51, 58, and 73 for the 5 minute cooling time after treatment), one would have culled these values or have increased the number of measurements so that the average value came closer to the true value. By discarding these values, one would come to an average value of 11 J/g (relative standard deviation 22%) at 5 minute cooling time before treatment and to an average value of 11 J/g (relative standard deviation 10%) after treatment. Relative standard deviation in the order of 22% was in line with the Patentee's own tests (relative standard deviation between 9% to 16%). Thus, the cooling time was not a factor influencing the exotherm, since the difference in the average values was not statistically significant.

(vii) This was not altered by the mention in document D27 that the precision of measurement by the sealed ampoule technique would be better than 3% relative, since this statement would appear to relate merely to the determination of the exotherm temperature.

(viii) Although the use of a cold finger would have been preferable for practical reasons (reducing the risks of explosion), the essential point was to ensure, independently of the cooling method used, that enough oxygen (i.e. at least a stoichiometric amount) should be present in the ampoule in order to oxidize the sample.

(ix) In view of the volume of the ampoules generally used in the sealed ampoule technique (i.e. 25 µl) and of the quantity of the polymer sample (5 mg) specified in the patent in suit, it was evident that this criterion was fulfilled.

(x) Thus, the skilled person was given sufficient guidance in the patent in suit (cf. page 7, lines 35 to 42) to carry out the determination of the oxidative exotherm.

(b) The arguments submitted by the Respondent may be summarized as follows:

(i) There was no standard method for determining the oxidative exotherm.

(ii) As shown by the documents D21 and D27, different methods might be used for cooling the ampoule, i.e. by immersion in a suitable refrigerant (e.g. liquid nitrogen) or by using a cold finger.

(iii) As pointed out in the Affidavit of Dr Oxley the sealed ampoule technique disclosed in D27 allowed rapid and reliable measurement.

(iv) If, however, the use of a cold finger was essential for the determination of the oxidative exotherm, this would have to have been indicated in the patent in suit.

(v) The tests conducted by the Respondent had been carried out in ampoules having a volume of 12.5 mm3. There was enough oxygen to oxidize the polymer sample.

(vi) There was no reason, contrary to the submissions of the Appellant (cf. point a.(vi), above) to discard some data from Table I of D16, let alone to consider them as invalid. There was further no indication in the patent in suit concerning the number of tests which should be carried out.

(vii) The data of Table 1 of D16 indeed showed the extreme variability of the determination of the oxidative exotherm. This variability might be related to parameters such as, inter alia, the particle size of the sample (powder), the position of the sample in the ampoule, the accessibility of the oxygen to the powder, the viscosity of the polymer when melted, the cooling time, and the cooling method, none of which were indicated in the patent in suit.

(viii) Thus, the patent in suit did not disclose adequate instructions to a person skilled in the art for determining the oxidative exotherm in a reliable manner.

Following preliminary remarks under Article 123(2) EPC concerning the auxiliary requests 1 to 3 then on file the Appellant indicated that it withdrew its auxiliary requests.

X. The Appellant requested that the decision of the Opposition Division be set aside and the patent be maintained as granted.

The Respondent requested that the appeal be dismissed.

1. The Appeal is admissible.

Procedural matters

2. As appears from the Summary of Facts and Submissions, the Board was faced with two procedural issues arising from written submissions of the Appellant and of the Respondent.

2.1. The first issue concerns the oral submissions by persons accompanying the representatives of both parties, i.e. Dr J. C. Oxley for the Appellant and Dr M. Y. Keating for the Respondent.

2.2. According to the principles set out in the decision G 4/95 (OJ EPO 1996, 412), if during oral proceedings before a board of appeal a party wishes that, in addition to the complete presentation of its case by its professional representative, oral submissions should be made on its behalf by an accompanying person, the professional representative should (i) request permission for such oral submissions to be made in advance to the oral proceedings, (ii) state the name and qualifications of the person for whom this permission is requested, and (iii) specify the subject-matter on which this person wishes to speak; in any case, (iv) these oral submissions should be made under the control of the professional representative (cf. Reasons for the Decision, points 8 and 10).

2.3. There is no doubt in the Board's view, that the Appellant's letter of 30 January 2004 announcing the presence of Dr J. C. Oxley satisfied these principles. The same is true for the letter of 28 January 2004 of the Respondent, read in combination with the letter of 8 November 2003, announcing the presence of Dr M. Y. Keating.

2.4. Consequently, both were given the opportunity to provide additional information on the sealed ampoule technique used in the differential scanning calorimetry during the oral proceedings.

2.5. The second point concerns the late-filed documents D31, D32, D33, D34, and D35.

2.6. D31 was submitted by the Appellant with the Statement of Grounds of Appeal in order to show the risks associated with the use of liquid nitrogen. In that respect, it is noted by the Board, firstly, that the introduction of this document has never been contested by the Respondent, and, secondly, that the Respondent has further made counterstatements (cf. point VI(vi) above) in view of the alleged risks of the use of liquid nitrogen. Thus, the Board sees no reason to disregard document D31.

2.7. Document D34, which has a similar content to D21, and document D35 were not relied upon by the Parties during the Oral proceedings, and there is therefore no need for the Board to consider them in the present decision. Thus, it was not necessary to decide on their admissibility into the proceedings (Article 114(2) EPC).

2.8. Document D32 is an Affidavit of Dr M. Y. Keating submitted by the Respondent, and document D33 is an Affidavit of Dr J. C. Oxley, submitted by the Appellant in response to D32. Both affidavits presented the views of two experts in the field of differential scanning calorimetry concerning the use of the sealed ampoule technique. Since the submissions presented therein were further supplemented by the contributions of Dr J. C. Oxley and Dr M. Y. Keating at the oral proceedings, the Board sees no reason not to admit them into the proceedings.

3. Sufficiency of disclosure

3.1. The patent in suit relates to a method of improving the taste and odour properties and the oxidative thermal stability of a first thermoplastic ethylene polymer, characterized by removing residual unreacted monomer or monomers, solvent and thermally unstable species from first ethylene polymer, thereby forming a second more oxidatively thermally stable ethylene polymer having an oxidative exotherm of not more than 50. percent of the oxidative exotherm of the first polymer.

3.2. It is thus clear that the process conditions should be chosen in such a manner that the second ethylene polymer has an oxidative exotherm of not more than 50 percent of the oxidative exotherm of the first polymer.

3.3. It thus follows that the implementation of the process according to the patent in suit presupposes that the values of the oxidative exotherm of the first and the second ethylene polymer could be determined in a reliable and reproducible manner.

3.4. This inevitably implies that the person skilled in the art knows the method and the essential operating conditions in order to determine this parameter, since he would otherwise be left in considerable doubt when choosing the process conditions in order to obtain a second ethylene polymer falling within the terms of the claimed process (cf. decision T 805/93 of 20 February 1993, not published in OJ EPO, Reasons point 5).

3.5. In that respect, the Board notes that it has been submitted by the Respondent that there was no standard method in the art for the determination of the oxidative exotherm of ethylene polymers as defined in the patent in suit. This has not been challenged by the Appellant and none of the documents D19 to D30, although relating to measurements by differential scanning calorimetry, refers to a method for the determination of this parameter.

3.6. It is further evident, in view of the submissions of the Appellant (cf. points IX(a.i) to (a.iii), above), that the oxidative exotherm relied on in the patent in suit represents a newly formulated parameter. Thus, the Board can only come to the conclusion that the Patentee (Appellant) has developed its own method for the determination of this new parameter.

3.7. As stated in the decision T 172/99 of 7 March 2002 (not published in OJ EPO), in the case of claimed subject- matter relying on a newly formulated and, hence, unfamiliar parameter to define the solution of a technical problem by which a relevant effect is achieved, the patentee, who has the duty of making a full and fair disclosure of his invention to the public (Article 83 EPC), is under a particular obligation to disclose all the information necessary reliably to define the new parameter not only (i) in a formally correct and complete manner such that its values can be obtained by a person skilled in the art without undue burden, but also (ii) in a manner which reliably retains the validity of the parameter for the solution of the technical problem for the application or patent in suit as a whole in the sense that the values routinely obtained will not be such that the claimed subject- matter covers variants incapable of providing the relevant effect or, therefore, of solving the associated technical problem.

3.8. According to the patent in suit differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) analysis is used to determine the oxidative exotherm of resin samples in the presence of oxygen. For each sample, a known amount of resin (approximately 5 milligram) was placed in a very small glass ampoule. The bottom of the glass ampoule was cooled with liquid nitrogen and the top of the ampoule was sealed. The sealed ampoule containing the resin sample is placed in the DSC sample chamber at room temperature. The DSC sample and reference chambers are then heated at a constant rate of 10°C per minute to a final temperature of 300°C. The thermal activity of the sample resin was continuously monitored versus the reference. The reference was an empty glass ampoule. The exotherm of the resin sample up to 300°C was calculated in terms of joules per gram (page 7, lines 35 to 42).

3.8.1. It follows from the paragraph 3.8 above, that the method disclosed in the patent in suit merely requires that the ampoule be cooled with liquid nitrogen without, however, either specifying a particular cooling method (e.g. immersion in liquid nitrogen or use of a cold finger) or a specific cooling time. Even if emphasis has been put by the Appellant on the risks of direct immersion in liquid nitrogen in view of document D31, it is however clear in view of documents D27 (cf. page 175, lines 1 to 10) and D23 (Figure 2) and of the tests carried out by the Respondent (cf. point VI(vi), above) that both methods were at the disposition of the skilled person.

3.8.2. It is further evident that the method disclosed in the patent in suit did not define the volume of the sealed ampoule to be used. In that respect, both parties, however, agreed that enough oxygen (i.e. at least a stoichiometric amount) should be present in the ampoule and it has been shown that the ampoules selected by the Appellant as well those used by the Respondent fulfilled this criterion.

3.8.3. This leads the Board to the conclusion that the determination of the oxidative exotherm carried out by the Respondent in document D16, using a direct immersion in liquid nitrogen for the sealing of the ampoule, has been carried out in the framework of the instructions given in the patent in suit.

3.9. In this connection, the analysis of the data submitted by the Respondent in document D16, shows, as calculated by the Appellant (cf. paragraph IX(a.v), above), a relative standard deviation of the oxidative exotherm of respectively 53% (cooling time 2 minutes) and 85% (cooling time 5 minutes) before treatment and of respectively 40% (cooling time 2 minutes) and 100% (cooling time 5 minutes) after treatment.

3.10. It thus follows that the extreme inaccuracy reflected by the high relative standard deviation of the measurements of the oxidative exotherm drastically questions the reliability of the parameter itself, and by way of consequence the reliability of the assessment of its required reduction of at least 50% which is essential to the solution of the technical problem underlying the patent in suit (i.e. improving the taste and the odor of ethylene polymer), since the standard deviation of the oxidative exotherm before and after treatment would inevitably overlap.

3.11. In that respect, the argument of the Appellant that the skilled person would have discarded, in its view, obviously outlying data (cf. point IX(a.vi) above), is not convincing, firstly since there is no evidence as to whether the alleged outlying values are in fact the invalid ones and secondly, even if they were, there is no justification as to why all these particular values should be disregarded. On the contrary, they contribute to a relative standard deviation associated with the experimental results.

3.12. Even if, for sake of argument, one would disregard the values deemed to be outlying by the Appellant, the relative standard deviation would nevertheless remain of the order of 53% and 40% before and after treatment for a cooling time of 2 minutes (cf. point 3.9, above) and it would be changed to a relative standard deviation of 22% before treatment for a cooling time of 5. minutes.

3.13. In this connection, the argument of the Appellant, that a relative standard deviation of 22% in the measurements would have been sufficiently small to reveal a "trend" in the figures which would have been sufficiently pronounced to enable the skilled person reliably to discern which compositions would fall within the scope of the claims and, hence, exhibit the relevant desirable qualities cannot not be accepted for the following reasons:

3.13.1. It has not been established that the highest relative standard deviation for the test would in fact lie at 22% (cf. point 3.12 above).

3.13.2. Even if it had, it must be borne in mind that the relative standard deviation of 22% would apply to the measurement both before and after purification, thus amounting to a total standard error of 44%. This would be a major proportion of the 50% minimum difference required by Claim 1, which cannot be regarded as corresponding to a reliable discernment of the relevant values.

3.14. Furthermore, whilst it might be true that the value of 22% for the relative standard deviation would come closer to the values reported for the relative standard deviation by the Appellant in its Statement of Grounds of Appeal (i.e. relative standard deviation between 16% and 9% before treatment), this level of uncertainty in the determination of the oxidative exotherm is in any case much more than what the skilled person would normally have expected from a determination of a heat of reaction by differential scanning calorimetry by the sealed ampoule technique in view of the teaching of D27 which, contrary to the statement of the Appellant (cf. point IX(a.vii), above), clearly mentions a precision for the determination of such a heat of reaction of less than 3% (cf. D27, page 180; Conclusions).

3.15. Whilst a reasonable amount of experimental inaccuracy is permissible when it comes to sufficiency of disclosure, the level of uncertainty in the present case is, in the Board's view, such that there would have to have been available adequate instructions in the specification or on the basis of the general knowledge of the skilled person in order to reduce the level of uncertainty in the determination of the oxidative exotherm to a level which could be reasonably expected by the skilled person in measurements by differential scanning calorimetry (i.e. a precision in the order of 3%), and, hence, which would not jeopardize the validity of the measured parameter.

3.16. In that respect, however, the patent in suit neither contains indication on further factors such as, for instance, the cooling time, the particle size of the sample, or the viscosity of the ethylene polymer which, as submitted by the Respondent (cf. point IX(b.vii), above) might influence the reliability of the determination and thus reduce the relative standard deviation of the results, nor gives guidance concerning the number of samples which should be tested in order to come closer to a "true" value (cf. point IX(a.vi), above). Nor could the lack of instructions in the patent in suit be overcome by the general knowledge of the skilled person, since the oxidative exotherm represents a newly formulated parameter for which, therefore, no common general knowledge on its determination was available in the art before the priority date of the patent in suit.

3.17. It thus follows that the patent in suit does not disclose the method for determining the oxidative exotherm in a manner which reliably retains the validity of the parameter for the solution of the technical problem, in the sense that the values routinely obtained would not be such that the claimed subject-matter covers variants incapable of providing the relevant effect (i.e. improving the taste of ethylene polymers).

3.18. For these reasons, the Board comes to the conclusion that the patent in suit does not comply with the requirements of Article 83 EPC, and therefore, in accordance with Article 100(b) and 102(1) EPC, the request of the Appellant must be refused.

Order

ORDER

For these reasons it is decided that:

The appeal is dismissed.

Footer - Service & support
  • Service & support
    • Website updates
    • Availability of online services
    • FAQ
    • Publications
    • Procedural communications
    • Contact us
    • Subscription centre
    • Official holidays
    • Glossary
Footer - More links
  • Jobs & careers
  • Press centre
  • Single Access Portal
  • Procurement
  • Boards of Appeal
Facebook
European Patent Office
EPO Jobs
Instagram
EuropeanPatentOffice
Linkedin
European Patent Office
EPO Jobs
EPO Procurement
X (formerly Twitter)
EPOorg
EPOjobs
Youtube
TheEPO
Footer
  • Legal notice
  • Terms of use
  • Data protection and privacy
  • Accessibility