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
      • 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
    Plastics in Transition

    Technology insight report on plastic waste management

  • 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 professional 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
      • Water-related technologies
      • CodeFest
      • Green tech in focus
      • Research institutes
      • Women inventors
      • 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
    • 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
      • 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
        • Russian Federation (RU)
          • Go back
          • Overview
          • Facts and figures
          • Numbering system
          • 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 
    • 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 professional 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
        • 2024 activities
        • 2025 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
      • Water-related technologies
      • CodeFest
        • Go back
        • 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
      • Women inventors
      • Lifestyle
      • Space and satellites
        • Go back
        • Overview
        • Patents and space technologies
      • Healthcare
        • Go back
        • Overview
        • Medical technologies and cancer
        • 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
        • Daily D questions
        • 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
        • Go back
        • Overview
        • Select Committee documents
      • 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
        • Space technologies
      • Innovation actors
        • Go back
        • Overview
        • Startups and SMEs
          • Go back
          • Overview
          • Publications
        • Research universities and public research organisations
      • 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
    • 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
        • Catalyst lab & Deep vision
          • Go back
          • 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 sorted by number (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 0453/92 (Enzymatic detergents/PROCTER & GAMLE) 20-12-1994
Facebook X Linkedin Email

T 0453/92 (Enzymatic detergents/PROCTER & GAMLE) 20-12-1994

European Case Law Identifier
ECLI:EP:BA:1994:T045392.19941220
Date of decision
20 December 1994
Case number
T 0453/92
Petition for review of
-
Application number
85870062.8
IPC class
C11D 3/386
Language of proceedings
EN
Distribution
DISTRIBUTED TO BOARD CHAIRMEN (C)

Download and more information:

Decision in EN 887.8 KB
Documentation of the appeal procedure can be found in the European Patent Register
Bibliographic information is available in:
EN
Versions
Unpublished
Application title

Liquid detergents containing boric acid to stabilize enzymes

Applicant name
THE PROCTER & GAMBLE COMPANY
Opponent name
Unilever PLC / Unilever N.V.
Board
3.3.01
Headnote
-
Relevant legal provisions
European Patent Convention Art 56 1973
Keywords

Inventive step (no) - secondary indicia - prejudice in the art (no)

Evidence

Catchword
-
Cited decisions
-
Citing decisions
T 0152/93
T 1212/01

I. The grant of European patent No. 0 162 033 in respect of European patent application No. 85 870 062.8 was announced on 13 December 1989 (cf. Bulletin 89/50). The patent was based on 15 claims, the only independent Claim 1 reading as follows:

"A heavy-duty liquid detergent composition comprising, by weight:

(a) from 10% to 50% of an anionic synthetic surfactant;

(b) from 3% to 30% of a C10-C22 fatty acid;

(c) from 2% to 15% of a water-soluble detergency builder;

(d) from 0.01% to 5% of a proteolytic or amylolytic enzyme;

(e) from 0.25% to 10% of boric acid or a boron compound capable of forming boric acid in the composition;

characterized in that it further comprises

(f) from 1 to 30 millimoles of calcium ion per liter of composition; and

(g) from 20% to 80% of water,

with the proviso that if polyols are present the weight ratio of said polyol to said boric acid is at least 1.3."

II. A notice of opposition was filed on 11 September 1990 by Unilever N.V. and Unilever PLC requesting the revocation of the patent on several grounds inter alia lack of novelty and lack of inventive step. The opposition was supported by five documents (numbered 2 to 6) of which only

(2) GB-A-2 126 242,

(4) US-A-4 318 818 and

(6) GB-A-2 079 305

are relevant to this decision.

III. By a decision pronounced on 23 January 1992 with written reasons notified on 4 March 1992 the Opposition Division revoked the patent.

The decision was based on Claims 1 to 15 filed on 21. February 1991 (main request) and on Claims 1 to 14 filed on 23 January 1992 (auxiliary request). Claim 1 of the main request corresponded to Claim 1 as granted and Claim 1 of the auxiliary request resulted from a combination of Claims 1 and 4 as granted.

The Opposition Division held that the subject-matter of the disputed patent according to both requests did not involve an inventive step. The detergent composition according to Claim 1 of both requests only differed from the substantially unbuilt compositions disclosed in document (2) in that it comprised from 2 to 10 % by weight of a water-soluble builder. However, in the absence of any unexpected effect with respect to this closest state of the art and having regard to the fact that the enzyme-stabilising system specified in Claim 1 of the patent in suit was known to stabilise enzyme containing aqueous detergent compositions, the claimed built detergent composition was considered obvious to the skilled person. In this context, the Opposition Division contended that no prejudice had been overcome in using the claimed enzyme-stabilising system in built compositions. Even if calcium ions were sequestered by the builder, it would have been sufficient to increase the amount of calcium ions in the composition to obtain the desired effective amount.

IV. An appeal was lodged against this decision on 13 May 1992 by The Procter & Gamble Company (Patentee) and Procter & Gamble European Technical Center, and the appeal fee was paid on 5 May 1992.

A Statement of Grounds of Appeal was submitted on 29. June 1992.

Oral proceedings took place before the Board on 20. December 1994.

V. At this hearing the Board observed that, according to Article 107 EPC, Procter & Gamble European Technical Center did not appear to be entitled to appeal. Moreover, the Board objected to some of the then standing claims.

In response to these objections, the Appellants' representative requested to delete the company in question as a party. Furthermore, the Appellant filed in the course of the oral proceedings two sets of new Claims 1 to 14 (main request and auxiliary request). Claim 1 of the main request differed from that of the granted version in that the feature (c) was replaced by:

"(c) from 3% to 15% of a water-soluble detergency builder selected from citrates and polyphosphates;"

and in that the following feature was inserted after "at least 1.3" (last line):

", and optionally from 0.1% to 1% by weight of water-soluble salts of ethylenediamine tetramethylene phosphonic acid, diethylenetriamine pentamethylene- phosphonic acid, ethylenediamine tetraacetic acid, or diethylenetriamine pentaacetic acid".

Claim 1 of the auxiliary request differed from Claim 1 of this main request only by the replacement of feature (c) by:

"(c) from 3% to 15% of a water-soluble detergency builder which is a citrate;"

The dependent Claims 2 to 14 of these requests concerned further embodiments of the compositions of both main claims.

The Appellant argued that the teaching of document (4) and the common general knowledge at the priority date represented by

(7) Kirk-Othmer, Vol. 22 (1983), 396-405,

(8) "Novo's Handbook of Practical Biotechnology", March 1987, 54 to 56, and

(9) "Detergent Enzymes - Past, Present and Future", JAOCS, Vol. 60, no. 5 (May, 1983), 1025-1027

showed that there was a strong prejudice against the addition of a builder to enzymatic detergent compositions such as disclosed in Document (2) since the skilled person would have expected that the addition of a builder would result in destabilisation of the enzyme owing to the sequestering activity of builders with respect to the enzyme-stabilising calcium ions. He also argued that in the skilled person's opinion the addition of higher amounts of calcium leaving unsequestered calcium ions in the composition would render the builder useless and therefore its introduction into the detergent composition senseless. In this context, he pointed out that the claimed amount of calcium ions was much lower than the sequestering capacity of the claimed minimum amount of builder.

Referring to the examples of the patent in suit, Appellant's test-report filed on 30 June 1992 and Opponent's evidence submitted on 11 September 1990, he also contended that the experimental data showed that the claimed combination of calcium ions and boric acid provided about the same enzyme-stabilisation as in unbuilt compositions and a better stabilising effect in built detergent compositions compared with those having a formate as stabiliser as described in document (4). This effect was, in the light of the existing prejudice indicated above, entirely unexpected. Moreover, the claimed compositions showed an improved cleaning performance compared with the substantially unbuilt compositions of document (2).

In addition, he argued with respect to document (2) that boric acid was clearly a less preferred stabilising agent compared with the described dicarboxylic acids, that the sequestering agents which could be used in amounts of only 1% or less were no builders in the sense of the patent in suit and that its disclosure did not provide any indication that the calcium ions in the compositions were used for the purpose of enzyme stabilisation. Furthermore, he submitted that document (6) related to a different problem, namely the provision of built enzymatic detergents having an improved physical stability. Moreover, this document only related to "unstressed" compositions, i.e. such compositions comprising a low soap and a low anionic surfactant content.

Having regard to these considerations, the addition of a builder to enzymatic detergent compositions such as disclosed in document (2) would not have been obvious to the skilled person.

VI. The Respondents fully agreed with the reasoning of the Opposition Division regarding lack of inventive step. They submitted that documents (2) and (6) showed that there was no prejudice against the use of builders in enzyme containing compositions. In this context they argued by referring to

(12) Marshall Sittig, "Detergent Manufacture Including Zeolite Builders and Other New Materials", 1979, Noyes Data Corporation, New Jersey, U.S.A, pages X and 347,

that it was common general knowledge that the water- soluble salts of dicarboxylic acids, such as malonic acid and succinic acid, used according to document (2) in amounts up to 10% by weight for the stabilisation of the enzyme were also builders. Thus, the compositions disclosed in document (2) comprising a salt of a dicarboxylic acid in the indicated amounts, a sequestrant (being a builder) in amounts up to about 1% and a soap (acting as a builder) in preferred amounts of 10% to 18% would be considered by the skilled person as being (weakly) built enzymatic detergent compositions like the compositions of the patent in suit.

Regarding document (6) they contended that the enzymatic compositions of this document contained builders even in amounts up to 60%, preferably 5% to 50%. Therefore, having regard to the fact that it was common general knowledge that builders improve the cleaning performance of detergent compositions, the addition of low amounts of the builders as claimed in both requests to compositions disclosed in document (2) did not involve an inventive step.

VII. The Appellant (Patentee) requested that the decision under appeal be set aside and that the patent be maintained on the basis of the main request, alternatively on the basis of the auxiliary request, both as submitted during the oral proceedings. Furthermore, he requested that Procter & Gamble European Technical Center be deleted from the notice of appeal.

VIII. The Respondents (Opponents) requested that the appeal be dismissed.

IX. At the conclusion of the oral proceedings the Board's decision to dismiss the appeal was announced.

1. After deleting Procter & Gamble European Technical Center as co-appellant in the Notice of Appeal, the appeal complies with Articles 106 to 108 and to Rule 64 EPC and is, therefore, admissible.

2. Main request

2.1. The subject-matter of present Claim 1 is based on Claim 1, in combination with page 4, lines 47 to 59 and page 5, lines 25 to 28, of the specification of the patent as granted, and also supported by Claim 1, in combination with page 9, first paragraph, page 11, lines 14 to 21, and page 14, lines 28 to 30, of the patent application as filed.

The subject-matter of present dependent Claim 2 is based on page 6, lines 6 to 14, of the originally filed application and on Claim 2 in combination with page 3, lines 50 to 52, of the patent as granted.

Present Claims 3 to 5 and 7 to 14 are identical with the respective Claims 3 to 5 and 8 to 15 of the patent as granted and Claims 2 to 4 and 7 to 14 of the originally filed patent application.

The subject-matter of present Claim 6 is based on Claims 5 and 6 of the patent application as filed and on Claims 6 and 7 of the patent in suit as granted.

Thus, all claims of the new set of claims of the main request comply with the requirements of Article 123 EPC.

2.2. After examination of the cited prior art, the Board has reached the conclusion that the subject-matter as defined in all claims is novel. Since this issue is no longer in dispute, it is not necessary to give reasons for this finding.

2.3. The remaining issue to be dealt with is whether the subject-matter of the claims involves an inventive step.

2.3.1. Both parties agreed that document (2) is the closest state of the art. The Board does not object to this position.

This document relates to stabilised enzyme-containing detergent compositions comprising from about 5 to about 75% by weight of at least one non-soap detergent such as an anionic surfactant, from about 0.1 to about 20. millimoles of calcium ion per litre composition, from about 0.05 to about 5% by weight of a proteolytic or amylolytic enzyme, from about 0.1 to 10% by weight of a stabilising agent such as a water-soluble salt of a dicarboxylic acid including succinic acid or boric acid, from about 0 to about 25% by weight of a soap, optionally a sequestrant, and the balance water (cf. page 1, lines 26 to 41 and 55 to 60).

It is true, that the document does not explicitly indicate the purpose of the calcium ions in the specified amounts. However, having regard to the discussion of the prior art indicating that enzymes in detergents are stabilised by calcium ions alone or in combination with other components [polyacids, saturated fatty acids or a short chain carboxylic acids, or salts thereof] (cf. page 1, lines 18 to 25), the fact that the presence of the specified amounts is apparently an important feature for the provision of enzyme-containing compositions having the desired high enzyme-stability (cf. page 1, lines 31 to 41; the examples which all contain calcium ions; Claims 14 and 15; and the statement on page 2, lines 2 to 4, that high levels of calcium ions are generally employed to correspond to the use of soap in the detergent composition), as well as the fact that the document does not give any pointer to another function, in the Board's judgment, a skilled person in reading document (2) would assume that the calcium ions are used in the specified amounts as a co- stabiliser for the stabilisation of the enzyme component.

Document (2) also describes that sequestrants, including organic polyphosphonates, are advantageously used and that they are preferably present in amounts up to about 1% by weight (cf. page 4, lines 15 to 22, and Claim 29). Other preferred additives generally employed in amounts of from about 2 to about 20% by weight are lower alcohols, preferably lower polyols such as propylene glycol (cf. page 4, lines 6 to 14, and also page 6, lines 23 to 29, of the patent in suit). Sodium borate provides about the same stabilising effect as the dicarboxylic acids (cf. the Table on page 7, particularly composition K compared with compositions B to J).

Representative examples of such compositions are given in Tables 1B and 2B. The composition W indicated in Table 2B comprises 20% by weight of sodium linear C10-C13 alkyl benzene sulphonate, 15% by weight of ethoxylated C11-C18 alcohol (7 moles EO per mole alcohol), 15% by weight of soap (75% lauric, 25% oleic), 9% by weight of ethanol, 3.5% by weight of propylene glycol-1,2, 0.5% by weight of proteolytic enzyme, 10 millimoles per litre of calcium, 0.3% by weight of Dequest 2060 (diethylene triamine pentamethylene phosphonic acid), 2% by weight of sodium borate and water (balance), and composition K indicated in Table 1B, differs from this composition W only in that the ethanol is omitted and the propylene glycol-1,2 is present in an amount of 12.5% by weight.

Therefore, the disclosure of document (2) as a whole makes available to the skilled person detergent compositions which only differ from the compositions as claimed in that the compositions according to present Claim 1 contain a water-soluble detergent builder selected from citrates and polyphosphates in the specified amounts.

The Appellant relied on the fact that these prior art stabilised enzyme-containing heavy duty liquid detergent compositions provided an unsatisfactory cleaning performance.

2.3.2. The Board accepts in the Appellant's favour that the technical problem underlying the disputed patent vis-à-vis the closest state of the art as represented by document (2), can be seen in the provision of a heavy-duty enzyme-containing liquid detergent composition having an improved cleaning performance without impairing the enzyme stability.

2.3.3. The patent in suit solves this technical problem according to Claim 1 by enzyme-containing detergent compositions of the above type containing from 3% to 15% by weight of a water-soluble builder selected from citrates and polyphosphates.

2.3.4. The experimental results of the test-report submitted by the Appellant on 30 June 1992 show (cf. page 6, third paragraph to page 7, first paragraph under the Table) that a composition identical to composition W of document (2) specified above except that 7.5% of soap was replaced by 7.5% citric acid builder, has about the same residual enzyme activity (2,3% less) after 7 days storage at 43 °C compared with the prior art composition W. Furthermore, the test-report filed by the Respondent on 11 September 1990 also shows (cf. page 3, third paragraph to page 4, first paragraph after the Table) that a composition according to present Claim 1 of the disputed patent which corresponds essentially to the above indicated composition K of document (2) save the presence of 4% citric acid as a builder in the composition according to the disputed patent, has practically the same residual enzyme activity (3% more) after 8 weeks storage at 37 °C compared with the known composition K. Thus, having regard to these unchallenged test-results and to the fact that - as contended by the Appellant and confirmed by the Respondents - it was common general knowledge that the presence of a citrate or polyphosphate builder in the claimed amounts gives a relevant improvement of the cleaning performance, the Board finds it credible that the technical problem as defined above has been solved.

2.3.5. The issue of inventive step hinges on the question of whether there was an incentive for the skilled person in the cited documents to improve the cleaning performance of the conventional enzyme-containing compositions as disclosed in document (2), whilst retaining their satisfactory enzyme stability, by adding the particular selected builders, namely a citrate or a polyphosphate, in amounts of from 3% to 15% by weight.

2.3.6. The Appellant argued that documents (4), (7), (8) and (9) substantiate a prejudice against the use of builders in enzyme-containing detergent compositions, since builders would destabilise enzymes owing to their sequestering properties with respect to the calcium ions needed for the stability of the enzyme molecules in the composition.

In this context, he also contended that, having regard to the calcium ion sequestering capacity of builders (about 4.9 millimoles per gram citrate as indicated in Appellants letter of 18 November 1994, page 11, last paragraph) it is surprising that the minimum amount of builder specified in present Claim 1, namely 3% by weight (corresponding to about 30g per litre), is a large excess compared to the maximum amount of calcium ion as claimed, namely 30 millimoles/l. However, having regard to the Board's observation that according to this calculation document (4) would describe compositions comprising a large excess of citrate compared with the amount of added calcium ion (cf. Example III, compositions I and IV to VIII, particularly composition V containing 0.3% of citric acid and 1.5 mmole/l of calcium, i.e. an amount of citrate capable of complexing about ten times the amount of calcium), the Appellant admitted that in the case of builders such as citric acid an equilibrium of "free" calcium and complexed calcium within the composition would exist providing sufficient calcium to stabilise the enzyme. This explanation which, in the Board's judgment, destroys Appellant's argument that the presence of an excess of builder with respect to the amount of the enzyme stabilising calcium ion would support inventive step, is confirmed by document (2) which describes the use of calcium citrate as a source of calcium ion (cf. page 2, lines 4 and 5).

2.3.7. Regarding the alleged presence of a prejudice against the use of a builder in enzyme-containing detergent compositions it is observed by the Board that, according to the established jurisprudence of the Boards of Appeal, the existence of a prejudice only can be demonstrated by common general expert knowledge in the field concerned, as represented in general in a standard work or textbook, since the technical information in a patent specification or a scientific article may be based on special premises or on the view of the drafter (cf. "Case Law of the Boards of Appeal of the EPO", 1987 to 1992, I D 3.4).

2.3.8. Therefore, Appellant's reference to Document (4) being a patent publication cannot be accepted by the Board to demonstrate a prejudice.

Furthermore, the same appears to apply for document (9) which concerns a publication in the JAOCS by a sales manager of NOVO (a company which produces enzymes for detergent compositions). However, even if this document would be accepted by the Board for the purpose of demonstrating the alleged prejudice, the assertion therein that liquids containing builders generally are not a stable matrix for enzymes primarily due to sequestering of divalent cations needed for stabilisation of enzyme molecules in the solution, cannot be accorded general validity since it is weakened by the term "generally" and preceded by the statement that today a heavy duty enzyme-containing detergent liquid may be found on a supermarket shelf in a number of product types including built liquids which may be further divided into phosphate and nonphosphate categories (cf. page 1026, right column, third complete paragraph).

Document (8) concerning Novo's Handbook of Practical Biotechnology, although published after the priority date of the disputed patent, may be regarded as showing, in the Board's judgment, the common general knowledge in the field of enzyme-containing heavy duty liquid detergents (HDLD) at about the priority date and may be, therefore, considered by the Board as evidence which is in its nature suitable to proof the existence of a prejudice. It describes that small amounts of calcium ions are necessary for a good enzyme stability and that builders, which bind calcium ions, destabilise enzymes (cf. page 55, the last two paragraphs). Furthermore, it is stated in this document that: "Therefore enzymes are more frequently used in HDLD products that do not have builders in them (i.e. nonbuilt HDLD). Examples of such compounds are tetrapotassium pyrophosphate (TKPP) and sodium citrate." (cf. page 55, last line to page 56, line 3). However, this technical information, in the Board's judgment, does not exclude the use of enzymes in built HDLD products as follows from the terms "more frequently used" in said statement.

2.3.9. In addition, the technical information provided by document (2) in combination with the common general knowledge supported by document (12) and document (6) casts serious doubts on the existence of the alleged prejudice.

Document (2) discloses - as indicated above - enzymatic heavy duty liquid detergent compositions of the type as claimed in the disputed patent. They contain advantageously sequestrants, preferably organic polyphosphonates, preferably in amounts up to about 1% by weight, particularly in the presence of soap (cf. page 4, lines 15 to 22). These polyphosphonates have, according to the common general knowledge, the same function as a builder as follows from document (7) (cf. page 396, first paragraph under "Phosphates", in combination with page 399, last paragraph) and document (12) (cf. page X).

A typical example in this document for such compositions (composition K) shows essentially the same enzyme stability as the most preferred compositions (cf. page 1, lines 31 to 60) which comprise as a stabiliser a dicarboxylic acid in an amount of 2% by weight instead of boric acid (cf. the Table on page 7, particularly compositions B to J compared with composition K). Furthermore, it is indicated that the stabilising dicarboxylic acids can be used in an amount of from about 0.1% to about 10%, preferably from about 1% to about 5%, by weight of the composition.

In addition it can be derived from the Table on page 7 of document (2), that composition K owing to its higher propylene glycol-1,2 content shows a remarkable improvement of the stability of the enzyme compared with composition W so that the skilled person would expect that in such more stable compositions higher amounts of probably enzyme destabilising components such as builders and anionic surfactants might be tolerated.

Having regard to this technical information and in the light of the disclosure of document (12), which concerns general textbook knowledge, indicating that dicarboxylic acid derivatives (particularly salts of oxalic acid or succinic acid) are such effective builders that no polyphosphates are required (cf. page X and page 347 under "Oxalic Acid Derivatives"), in the Board's judgment, the skilled person in reading document (2) would have realised on the basis of his common general knowledge that the "substantially unbuilt" compositions (containing, as indicated above, preferably up to about 1% of a sequestrant and/or up to 5% of a salt of a dicarboxylic acid) might contain builders other than salts of dicarboxylic acids in amounts falling under the scope of present Claim 1 of the disputed patent, particularly close to the lower limit (3% by weight).

Furthermore, document (6) which relates to stable highly built enzyme-containing liquid detergent compositions comprising a mixture of a polyol, boric acid and a polyacrylate polymer to stabilise the enzyme and to improve the physical stability of the composition, as well as relatively high amounts of builders such as citrates or polyphosphates (preferably 5% to 50%) (cf. page 1, lines 21 to 80 and page 2, lines 84 to 102), provides an additional indication that relatively high amounts of builders (such as citrates or polyphosphates as claimed in the disputed patent) are not generally incompatible with enzymes used in detergent compositions. The Appellant's argument that this document is concerned with a different technical problem, namely the improvement of the physical stability of the enzyme-containing detergent compositions, and therefore would not be relevant, cannot be accepted by the Board. Although the teaching of document (6) with respect to the state of the art discussed therein indeed relates to the improvement of the physical stability of the liquid compositions by using a polyacrylate and a ratio of the polyol to the boric acid higher than 1 (cf. page 1, lines 21 to 40), it is the Board's position that this document clearly discloses that by using these three components, highly built compositions having both a satisfactory enzyme stability and a satisfactory physical storage stability can be obtained (cf. page 1, lines 40 to 45, and e.g. Example 1, which concerns a composition comprising 20% by weight of a polyphosphate builder and 10% by weight of an anionic surfactant). Moreover, the point at issue is whether a prejudice existed with respect to the incompatibility of builders and detergent enzymes. Since document (6) relates as indicated above to detergent compositions containing enzymes and builders, the Board does not see any reason why this document would not be relevant to this question.

2.3.10. Although it is true, that the cited prior art taken as a whole shows that the use of builders in enzyme- containing liquid detergent compositions is not free of problems, the skilled person would have derived from it, that satisfactory stable enzyme-containing built detergent compositions can be achieved provided that the builder concentrations are kept relatively low and/or the enzyme stabilising agents such as polyols are used in relatively high amounts.

Therefore, in the Board's judgment, the Appellant's submissions with respect to the existence of the prejudice against the use of builders in enzyme- containing HDLD-compositions, which has to be in its nature unambiguous and of general validity, fail on the ground of lack of convincing evidence.

2.3.11. The remaining question to be answerded is whether, in the absence of the alleged prejudice, it would have been obvious to the the skilled person, on the basis of his common general knowledge and the cited prior art, to improve the cleaning performance of the compositions according to document (2) by raising the builder content above the amounts indicated therein.

2.3.12. In the Board's judgment, it was common general knowledge that the detersive effect of surfactants can be increased by means of builders (cf. e.g. document (7), page 396, under the heading "Builders"). Furthermore, it is the Board's position that this also holds true in cases where "minor amounts" of builders are already present as taught by document (2). Having regard to the fact that these "minor amounts" are not specified in this document save by the indication that the upper limit is preferably about 1% by weight, the skilled person would have deduced from the teaching of document (2) on the basis of his common general knowledge that the technical problem underlying the disputed patent as defined above would have been solved by increasing the builder content beyond this preferred upper limit. The lower limit of 3% by weight for the amount of builder as claimed according to the disputed patent is so close to the preferred upper limit mentioned in document (2) that the increase of the builder content into the claimed range of 3 to 15% by weight did not involve any inventive activity. Furthermore, it is the Board's position that the replacement of the preferred polyposphonates indicated in document (2) by the widely used polyphosphates was a measure which the person skilled in the art would have seriously contemplated.

3. Thus, the Respondent's main request must be refused on the ground of lack of inventive step.

4. Auxiliary request

4.1. The subject-matter of Claim 1 of the auxiliary request differs from that of the main request only in that the builder is further restricted to a citrate.

4.2. It is the Board's position, that the considerations with respect to the main request are also applicable to the auxiliary request. Furthermore, having regard to the fact that citrates are known builders and commonly known alternatives for polyphosphates if these compounds cannot be used or only in reduced amounts because of legislatively mandated reductions in detergent phosphate concentrations (cf. document (12), page X; and document (7), the paragraph bridging pages 396 and 397, and page 401, third paragraph), the selection of citrates would also have been obvious to the skilled person. Therefore, the subject-matter of Claim 1 of the auxiliary request does not involve the required inventive step either.

4.3. The dependent Claims 2 to 14 of this request fall together with Claim 1, since the Board can only decide on the request as a whole.

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