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
      • Fee Assistant
      • Fee reductions and compensation

    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
      • 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
        • Taiwan, Province of China (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
      • Fee Assistant
      • Fee reductions and compensation
        • Go back
        • Fee support scheme insights
    • 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 universities
            • Go back
            • Overview
            • IP education resources
            • Participating universities
        • 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
        • Go back
        • Integrated management at the EPO
    • 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
      • 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
      • 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
          • Events
        • 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
      • Observatory tools
        • Go back
        • Overview
        • Deep Tech Finder
        • Digital Library on Innovation
          • Go back
          • Overview
          • Become a contributor to the Digital Library
      • About the Observatory
        • Go back
        • Overview
        • Work plan
        • Chief Economist
          • Go back
          • Overview
          • Economic studies
          • Academic Research Programme
            • Go back
            • Overview
            • Current research projects
            • Completed research projects
        • 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 0657/96 29-04-1998
Facebook X Linkedin Email

T 0657/96 29-04-1998

European Case Law Identifier
ECLI:EP:BA:1998:T065796.19980429
Date of decision
29 April 1998
Case number
T 0657/96
Petition for review of
-
Application number
91900961.3
IPC class
G03H 1/02
B29C 59/00
Language of proceedings
EN
Distribution
DISTRIBUTED TO BOARD CHAIRMEN (C)

Download and more information:

Decision in EN 1007.07 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 for embossing holograms

Applicant name
Koninklijke Emballage Industrie Van Leer B.V.
Opponent name
Giesecke & Devrient GmbH
Board
3.4.02
Headnote
-
Relevant legal provisions
European Patent Convention Art 56 1973
European Patent Convention R 86(3) 1973
Keywords

Inventive step (no)

Admissability of fifth auxiliary request at the oral proceedings (no)

Catchword
-
Cited decisions
T 0095/83
T 0270/90
Citing decisions
-

I. European patent No. 0 502 111 (application No. 91 900 961.3) was revoked by decision of the Opposition Division.

The reason for the revocation was that the subject-matter of claim 1 as granted did not involve an inventive step in the sense of Article 56 EPC in view of the disclosure in documents:

D1: DE-A-2 649 479

D3: EP-B-0 034 392.

The Opposition Division in particular considered that it would be obvious to a person skilled in the art interested in obtaining interference effects from a laminate to include an embossing step as taught in document D1 in the manufacturing method described in document D3, and thus to arrive at the claimed method.

II. The appellant (proprietor of the patent) filed an appeal against the decision revoking the patent.

III. In a communication pursuant to Article 11(2) of the rules of procedure of the Boards of Appeal, issued in preparation for the oral proceedings which were held on 29. April 1998, the Board inter alia drew the parties' attention to the contents of document:

D6: JP-A-62-283 382.

A translation into English of document D6, which was prepared on the Board's behalf, was transmitted to the parties on 2 April 1998.

IV. The appellant requested that the decision under appeal be set aside, and that the patent be maintained, either as granted (main request) or with a single independent claim as filed with his letter of 21 October 1996 (first auxiliary request).

Appellant's second to fifth auxiliary requests were directed to the maintenance of the patent on the basis of a series of further single independent claims filed during the oral proceedings on 29 April 1998.

Claim 1, the only independent claim of appellant's main request, reads as follows:

"1. Method for producing a material embodying an interference pattern, for example a holographic image, comprising the steps of:

- providing a base film,

- solvent coating a transparent, thermoformable lacquer on one side of the base film which lacquer is capable of forming a releasable, direct bond with the base film,

- drying the lacquer so as to form a solid lacquer layer,

- introducing an interference pattern by embossing the side of the solid lacquer layer which faces away from the base film with a printing device carrying the negative of said interference pattern,

- cladding the embossed side of the lacquer layer with a metal layer,

- glueing a substrate onto the metal layer, and

- releasing the base film from the lacquer layer."

Claim 1 of appellant's first auxiliary request is distinguished from claim 1 of the main request in that the paragraph which defines the solvent coating step is supplemented at its end with the expression "and which lacquer is plasticized with a plasticizer,".

Claim 1 of appellant's second auxiliary request reads as follows:

"1. Method for producing a sheet material, such as packaging paper, comprising the steps of:

- providing a base film,

- solvent coating a transparent, thermoformable lacquer, on one side of said base film, which lacquer is capable of forming a releasable, direct bond with the base film, and which lacquer is plasticized with a plasticizer,

- drying the lacquer so as to form a solid lacquer layer,

- introducing an interference pattern by embossing the side of the plasticized, solid lacquer layer which faces away from the base film with a printing device carrying the negative of said interference pattern,

- cladding the embossed side of the lacquer layer with a metal layer,

- glueing a sheet-type substrate onto the metal layer,

- stripping off the base film by means of a roller so as to obtain the sheet material comprising the sheet-type substrate, glue, metal layer and embossed lacquer layer."

Claim 1 of appellant's third auxiliary request is distinguished from Claim 1 of his second auxiliary request in that the expression "having a contact angle of zero degrees with respect to the base film" has been inserted into the paragraph defining the solvent coating step, to replace the comma after "thermoformable lacquer".

Claim 1 of appellant's fourth auxiliary request reads as follows:

"1. Method for producing a packaging paper, comprising the steps of:

- providing a base film,

- solvent coating a transparent, thermoformable lacquer, on one side of said base film, which lacquer is capable of forming a releasable, direct bond with the base film, which lacquer is plasticized with a plasticizer,

- drying the lacquer so as to form a solid lacquer layer,

- introducing an interference pattern by embossing the side of the plasticized, solid lacquer layer which faces away from the base film with a printing device carrying the negative of said interference pattern,

- said step of embossing the lacquer layer being carried out at relatively low pressure and temperature,

- cladding the lacquer layer with a metal layer,

- glueing a sheet-type substrate onto the metal layer,

- stripping off the base film by means of a roller so as to obtain the packaging paper comprising the sheet-type substrate, glue, metal layer and lacquer layer."

Claim 1 of appellant's fifth auxiliary request is distinguished from Claim 1 of his fourth auxiliary request in that the expression "from the group comprising phtalates, citrates, phosphates, adipates, azelates, sebacates, ditridecyl phtalates and polymeric plasticizers of polyethers and polyurethanes" has been added at the end of the paragraph defining the solvent coating step, after "a plasticizer".

V. The respondent (opponent) requested that the appeal be dismissed (main request). As an auxiliary request, in case the Board envisaged to decide to maintain the patent as amended in accordance to the appellant's fifth auxiliary request, the respondent requested that the oral proceedings be adjourned and that costs incurred be awarded to him.

VI. Appellant's arguments in support of his requests can be summarized as follows.

The invention of the patent in suit relates to the manufacturing of packaging paper, which is quite different from the manufacturing of transfer foils to be applied by hot stamping onto various objects, as disclosed in document D1 and most of the cited prior art documents. The manufacturing of transfer foils is subjected to a number of technical constraints, which would render it totally unsuitable for the manufacturing of packaging paper.

In particular, hot stamping of transfer foils involves high pressure and temperatures being applied to limited portions of the foils through a dye, resulting in a breaking of the foils along the outline of the dye. Since the interference pattern previously embossed into the lacquer layer should not be altered in the hot stamping step, it is necessarily formed under high pressure and high temperature conditions, into a hard layer material.

In contrast, the invention is based on the manufacturing process of document D3, in which packaging paper is obtained by providing a soft and flexible lacquer layer onto a base film, the whole surface of which can easily be stripped off by means of a roller without any risk of breakage of the film.

Since document D1, like all the prior art citations relating to the manufacturing of hot stamping transfer foils, discloses an embossing operation which is performed at high pressure and high temperature conditions, it cannot suggest the low pressures and temperatures used in the embossing step of the present invention, nor the addition of a plasticizer into the composition of the lacquer layer which receives the embossed interference pattern.

It has also been recognized that in the method of the invention, a small proportion of the solvent used for coating the lacquer onto the base film remains within the lacquer layer, of which it improves the deformability and flexibility in combination with a definite amount of plasticizer.

In addition, an intermediate wax layer is formed between the base film and the thermoformable lacquer in the method of document D1, in such a way as to cause separation of the base film upon heating during the hot stamping process. The absence of such intermediate release layer is however an essential aspect of the present invention, which is not disclosed either in document D6.

In his written submissions the appellant also stressed that document D3, published in August 1981, referred to document US-A-3 235 395, which was published as early as February 1966 and which already related to a method wherein a base film was coated with a lacquer layer, without interposition of a wax layer. Document D1 was published in May 1978, thus, it was more than eleven years counted from the publication date of document D1 and more than twenty-three years counted from the publication of US-A-3 235 395, before the claimed manufacturing process was envisaged. Taking into account that the process according to the invention fulfilled a long-felt need to manufacture luxury packaging material at higher speed and at lower costs, the above long delay was certainly an indication for an inventive step.

With respect to the question of the admissibility of his fourth and fifth auxiliary requests, presented only at the end of the oral proceedings of 29 April 1998, the appellant indicated that in his experience, it was common practice of the instances of the EPO to accept such requests. Furthermore, the additional features introduced into claim 1 of the fourth auxiliary request to specify that the sheet material produced by the claimed method was a packaging paper and that the step of embossing the lacquer layer was carried out at relatively low pressure and temperature were already implicitly included in the claims of the preceeding requests, and had been amply discussed, accordingly. Claim 1 of the fifth auxiliary request had been supplemented with a list of specific plasticizers in order to better stress the inventive presence of such plasticizers. The appellant however indicated that he did not claim to have invented these specific plasticizers.

VII. The respondent for his part approved of the Opposition Division's reasoning as to lack of inventive step and submitted the following additional arguments.

Document D1, and the other citations relating to the manufacturing of hot stamping transfer foils cannot be considered to pertain to a different technical art than the claimed invention. These documents are indeed directed to the manufacturing, among others, of credit cards provided with a hologram, which is also an application explicitly envisaged in the patent in suit, and a hot stamping transfer foil certainly constitutes a sheet material comparable to packaging paper.

As compared to the method disclosed in documents D1 or GB-A-2 129 739 (D4), the claimed method only uses a different lacquer material, which does not require any intermediate wax release layer. Such lacquer material is however known from document D3, and also document D6 shows a manufacturing method in which a thermoformable lacquer layer for receiving an embossed interference pattern is directly solvent coated onto a base film.

Introducing plasticizers into plastic materials to improve their workability is a most common measure, as is evidenced for instance by the document:

Kunststoff-Lexikon, Carl Hanser Verlag, Munich and Vienna, 7th edition, 1981, pages 361, 555 and 556 (D5).

Neither can the proper selection of adequate pressure and temperature conditions for an embossing operation be considered to go beyond the skilled person's normal capabilities.

Concerning the question of the admissibility of appellant's late fourth and fifth auxiliary requests, the respondent accepted that claim 1 of the fourth auxiliary request did not raise fundamentally new issues which had not been considered earlier in the procedure. However, assessment of the merits of the specific plasticizers identified for the first time in claim 1 of the fifth auxiliary request called for advice from a competent specialist of such plasticizers. The surprising move of the appellant could not have been anticipated by the respondent, who could hardly have prepared an adequate reaction.

1. The appeal is admissible.

2. Appellant's main request

2.1. Novelty of the subject-matter of claim 1 of appellant's main request was not contested by the respondent.

In particular, document D3 discloses a method for producing a laminate material, which comprises a sequence of manufacturing steps from which the sequence defined in claim 1 is distinguished by the additional step of embossing the solid lacquer with a printing device carrying the negative of an interference pattern (see D3, claim 2).

Document D1 for its part discloses a method for producing a material embodying an interference pattern, for example a holographic image which comprises most of the steps set out in present claim 1, but in which an intermediate release layer 2 is provided between base film 1 and lacquer layer 3 (see Figure 1 and description page 6, last paragraph to page 7, first paragraph). The method set out in present claim 1 is distinguished from this known method in that the lacquer layer is provided directly onto the base film and is capable of forming a releasable, direct bond with it.

2.2. Present claim 1 is not expressly limited to the manufacturing of large sheets of material comprising interference patterns extending over a large portion of their surface, such as luxury packaging paper, as was submitted by the appellant. It could, at least formally, be considered to encompass methods of providing any kind of support with an interference pattern or holographic image.

However, taking into account the specific embodiments disclosed in the patent, which all relate to the manufacturing of packaging paper, the references made in the description to the content of document D3, which is also dedicated to the manufacturing of packaging paper, and the identity of certain figures of the drawings of the patent in suit with those of document D3, the choice of the method disclosed in the latter document as constituting the nearest prior art, which was made also by the Opposition Division and not contested by the parties, seems technically reasonable.

2.3. In the manufacturing method disclosed in document D3, the smooth surface of a lacquer layer formed upon a base film is clad directly, without any intermediate embossing operation, with a metal layer, so as to obtain as an end product a metallised packaging paper having a regularly reflecting mirror surface (see column 2, lines 14 to 17 and column 3, lines 33 to 39).

The distinguishing feature of the method set out in claim 1, which consists in introducing an interference pattern by embossing the side of the solid lacquer layer which faces away from the base film with a printing device carrying the negative of said interference pattern, results in a three-dimensionally structured reflective metallic surface instead of the smooth surface of document D3. Such structured surface is able of generating optical interference effects, which confer a particularly attractive visual aspect to the material so produced, rendering it highly suitable for being used as luxury packaging paper (see column 3, lines 22 to 24 of the present description).

Thus, the technical problem solved by the claimed method can be seen, generally, in providing a method for manufacturing a packaging paper of an improved visual attractivity, as compared to the packaging paper produced in accordance with the method of document D3.

The mere formulation of the above technical problem cannot, in the Board's view, provide any positive contribution for the assessment of the inventive step involved by the claimed method, and this was not alleged by the appellant either. As a matter of fact, optical aspect and visual attractivity are common concerns in the manufacturing of the packaging paper, which are illustrated for instance by the suggestions made in document D3 to dye or pigment the lacquer layer (see column 2, lines 49 to 52) or to deposit the metal layer in spaced or interconnected bands, strips, or lines for decorative or ornamental purposes (see column 3, lines 8 to 13 and column 4, line 62 to column 5, line 4).

2.4. The skilled person starting from the method of document D3 and striving at solving the above technical problem would in the Board's view look for prior art techniques expressly dedicated to the producing of optical, decorative effects in a transparent lacquer layer cladded with a metal layer, similar to the lacquer layer at the surface of the packaging paper of document D3.

The introductory portion of document D1 explicitly states that particularly interesting optical effects can be obtained, when a metal layer of substantial constant thickness is deposited onto the surface of a lacquer layer which is provided with the structured pattern (see page 3, last paragraph), whereby the structured pattern is embossed with a printing device 30. carrying the negative of said pattern (see Figure 3). Document D1 admittedly does not specify that the structure pattern forms an "interference" pattern in the sense of claim 1, stating only that the pattern gives rise to different light reflection or light refraction (see page 3, lines 5 to 14). A very similar technique is disclosed in document D6, in particular for the illustration of books, in which, like in the patent in suit, holograms are employed "on account of their ornamental character in emitting light with rainbow colours and their surprise effect due to the three-dimensional appearance". These holograms are embossed into the surface of a solid resin layer with a printing device carrying the negative of an interference pattern, the embossed layer being then clad with a metal layer and transferred to a paper surface (see the translation into English of document D6, page 2, lines 21 to 35 and page 6, the first paragraph below the table).

Document D4 also discloses the embossing of a hologram into the surface of a transparent thermoplastic layer clad with a metal layer, and its transferring onto any document "where a particularly unusual and attractive effect is desired" (see page 1, lines 110 to 115).

Thus, in the Board's opinion, the skilled person would easily derive from the prior art the idea of increasing the visual attractivity of the packaging paper obtained by the method of document D3 by providing it with an interference pattern or holographic image of the kind disclosed in documents D1, D4 or D6. Documents D1, D4 and D6 consistently teach that a three-dimensional or holographic pattern can be introduced by embossing the solid thermoformable layer which faces away from a base film with a printing device carrying the negative of said pattern, said embossing operation being performed in accordance with documents D1 and D6 before the surface of a solvent coated, transparent thermoformable layer is clad with a metal layer. The laminate produced by the method of document D3, which is the starting point for the skilled person's considerations, also comprises a transparent, thermoformable layer which is solvent coated onto a based film before being clad with a metal layer. Accordingly, it would seem obvious for the skilled person to introduce the desired pattern by embossing the side of the thermoformable layer which faces away from the base film with a printing device, before cladding the embossed surface with a metal layer, like in documents D1 or D6.

The appellant in this respect submitted that the skilled person would not seriously consider the teaching of documents D1, D4 or D6, because these documents related to the application of transfer foils onto substrates by a hot stamping procedure, which implied the use of transparent, thermoformable layers exhibiting a greater hardness and being capable of resisting higher temperature and pressure conditions than the lacquer layer used in document D3 for the production of packaging paper. He also stressed that the prior art did not disclose the embossing of a solid lacquer layer directly formed upon the surface of a base film, i.e. without any intermediate wax layer.

However, the Board is not convinced that the solid lacquer layers or the transfer foils disclosed in documents D1, D4 or D6 exhibit mechanical properties so fundamentally different from those of the lacquer layer of document D3, that the skilled person would have been deterred from at least trying to perform the embossing operation also onto the lacquer layer of document D3. On the contrary, the reference made in the description of the present patent to the advantages brought by the optional addition of plasticizer into the lacquer layer in reducing temperature and pressure requirements for the embossing operation (see column 3, lines 3 to 11) suggests that the unplasticized lacquer layer is relatively hard. In addition, the lacquer layers of documents D1 and D6 are obtained substantially in the same way as the lacquer layer disclosed in document D3 and defined in present claim 1, i.e. by solvent coating a transparent, thermoformable lacquer which is subsequently dried (see document D1, example 2 as described in the passage bridging pages 8 and 9 or the translation into English of document D6, page 3, lines 34 to 41). The last mentioned passage of document D6 also shows that, contrary to appellant's submission, the embossing of a hologram image onto a lacquer layer directly formed onto a base film is explicitly disclosed in the document. Accordingly, the mechanical properties of the lacquer layer used in the transfer foils of documents D1 and D6 would not be expected to be fundamentally different from those of the lacquer layer in the packaging paper of document D3.

The scant description of the embossing step in the present patent does not either appear to support the existence of any particular difficulties caused by the mechanical properties of the solid lacquer layer, which could deter the skilled person from at least trying to perform the embossing operation, and thus to arrive at the claimed method.

In support of his argumentation in favour of the non-obviousness of the claimed method, the appellant also referred to the long span of time between the date of publication of the citations invoked by the respondent, of which the last, document D3, was published in 1981, and the priority of the present patent, which is in 1989. He did not however demonstrate nor produce any evidence that a noticeable amount of efforts had been made in the interval to solve the technical problem underlying the invention, nor that there was any long-felt need of manufacturing a packaging paper having an improved visual appearance.

For these reasons, the subject-matter of claim 1 of appellant's main request does not in the Board's opinion involve an inventive step in the sense of Article 56 EPC.

3. Appellant's first auxiliary request

Claim 1 of appellant's first auxiliary request is distinguished from claim 1 of his main request by the additional feature that the transparent, thermoformable lacquer is plasticized with a plasticizer.

The addition of plasticizers is a well known means of reducing the solidification temperature, brittleness and hardness of synthetic materials, and to improve their workability, as is evidenced by document D5, and was not contested by the appellant. In the Board's opinion, once the skilled person has envisaged to emboss the solid lacquer layer of document D3 with a printing device to introduce into it an interference pattern, which is obvious for the reasons given above in relation with appellant's main request, he would without the exercise of inventive ingenuity select adequate operation conditions for the embossing step. The workability or consistence of the material of the lacquer layer is an evident parameter upon which the skilled person can exert an influence, in particular through the addition of an appropriate amount of plasticizers.

Accordingly, the subject-matter of claim 1 of appellant's first auxiliary request is not considered to involve an inventive step in the sense of Article 56 EPC.

4. Appellant's second and third auxiliary requests

Claim 1 of appellant's second auxiliary request corresponds in substance to claim 1 of his first auxiliary request with the additional limitation that the material to be produced by the method is specified to be a "sheet material such as packaging paper", and that the releasing of the base film from the lacquer layer at the last step of the method is specified to be obtained by "stripping off the base film by means of a roller".

Claim 1 of appellant's third auxiliary request is identical to claim 1 of his second auxiliary request, with the additional limitation that the transparent, thermoformable lacquer which is solvent coated onto the base film is specified to have "a contact angle of zero degrees with respect to the base film".

The method of document D3, which as the nearest prior art is the starting point for the assessment of inventive step of the claims of appellant's main and second auxiliary requests, already produces "a sheet material, such as packaging paper" (see column 3, lines 34 to 39), from which the base film is stripped off by means of a roller (see roller D on Figure 5), the lacquer also having a contact angle of zero degrees with respect to the base film (see claim 1).

Accordingly, claims 1 of appellant's second and third auxiliary requests, as compared to claim 1 of his first auxiliary request, have only been supplemented with features already present in the nearest prior art as disclosed in document D3. The subject-matter of these claims does not therefore involve an inventive step in the sense of Article 56 EPC either, for the reasons already given in relation with claim 1 of the first auxiliary request.

5. Appellant's fourth auxiliary request

Claim 1 of appellant's fourth auxiliary request corresponds in substance to claim 1 of his second auxiliary request with the additional limitations that the "sheet material, such as packaging paper" is now definitely specified to be "packaging paper" and that the step of embossing the lacquer layer is specified to be "carried out at relatively low pressure and temperature".

The limitation of the claim to the producing of a packaging paper does not change the situation with respect to the assessment of inventive step, because the method of documents D3, which is the nearest prior art, is also specifically dedicated to the manufacturing of such packaging paper.

The pressure and temperature conditions of the embossing step constitute, besides the workability of the lacquer material, most obvious operational parameters to be properly selected by the skilled person, when he envisages to emboss the lacquer layer with an interference pattern.

The manufacturing of a packaging paper as disclosed in document D3 does not require any high temperature and pressure treatment like the hot stamping operation disclosed in documents D1, D4 or D6, which calls for still higher temperature and pressure conditions for the embossing step in order to avoid that the embossed pattern be later destroyed during the hot stamping operation. The skilled person would not therefore, in the Board's opinion, have any reasonable ground not to select for the embossing of the lacquer layer in the manufacturing of a packaging paper "relatively low pressure and temperature" conditions in the sense of claim 1 of appellant's fourth auxiliary request, i.e. pressure and temperature conditions below those of the known hot stamping procedure.

For these reasons, the subject-matter of claim 1 of appellant's fourth auxiliary request is not considered to involve an inventive step in the sense of Article 56 EPC.

6. Appellant's fifth auxiliary request

Claim 1 of appellant's fifth auxiliary request is identical to claim 1 of his fourth auxiliary request, with the additional limitation that the plasticizer in the transparent, thermoformable lacquer is specified to be selected from the group comprising phtalates, citrates, phosphates, adipates, azelates, sebacates, ditridecyl phtalates and polymeric plasticizers of polyethers and polyurethanes.

6.1. Admissibility of the request

The appellant filed his fifth auxiliary request only towards the end of the oral proceedings held on 29. April 1998.

The Board cannot agree to his submission that it would be common practice of the Boards of Appeal to accept such late filed requests. As a matter of fact, the established practice of the Boards when deciding upon the admission of late requests into the procedure, is to exert their discretion under Rule 86(3) EPC with caution, taking in particular in due consideration whether there was some clear justification both for the amendments proposed and for the late submission (see decision T 95/83, OJ EPO 1985, 75) or whether, for reasons of fairness to the other party, they were simple and clear enough to be understood immediately and were obviously allowable (see decision T 270/90, OJ EPO 1993, 725).

In the present procedure, the admissibility of appellant's second to fourth auxiliary requests, all filed during the oral proceedings, was recognized because, on the one hand, the wording of claim 1 of the second and third auxiliary requests only differed from the wording of the corresponding claims filed by the appellant one month before the oral proceedings in that they were re-drafted in the one-part form, after the Board had objected to certain unclarities caused by the proposed two-part form. On the other hand, claim 1 of the fourth auxiliary request had only been supplemented with features specifying that the material produced was packaging paper and that the embossing was performed at relatively low pressure and temperature, which had already been amply discussed in the proceedings in relation to the earlier requests. The respondent himself explicitly indicated that he had no objection to the fourth auxiliary request being considered by the Board.

In contrast, the introduction into claim 1 of the fifth auxiliary request of the list of specific compounds from which the plasticizer of the transparent, thermoformable lacquer should be selected, surprisingly introduces new issues. The fact that this list of compounds could be of any relevance to the procedure could hardly have been forseen by the respondent or the Board, the less so since the list had not been specified in any of the dependent claims as originally filed or as granted.

In addition, the appellant himself admitted that he did not claim any inventive merit of the compounds identified in the list, which were all well known plasticizers. The Board cannot therefore see any justification for the appellant filing at this late stage amendments which, a priori, cannot reasonably be expected to substantially modify the issue on inventive step, and thus to result in an allowable claim.

For these reasons appellant's fifth auxiliary request is not considered to be admissible.

The respondent's auxiliary requests for postponement of the oral proceedings and apportionment of costs, which were subject to the condition of the Board envisaging to allow appellant's fifth auxiliary request, need not be considered, accordingly.

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