Case: 19-1319 Document: 74 Page: 1 Filed: 12/23/2020
United States Court of Appeals
for the Federal Circuit
______________________
GENERAL ELECTRIC COMPANY,
Appellant
v.
RAYTHEON TECHNOLOGIES CORPORATION,
Appellee
______________________
2019-1319
______________________
Appeal from the United States Patent and Trademark
Office, Patent Trial and Appeal Board in No. IPR2017-
00428.
______________________
Decided: December 23, 2020
______________________
WILLIAM F. LEE, Wilmer Cutler Pickering Hale and
Dorr LLP, Boston, MA, argued for appellant. Also repre-
sented by BRIAN DRISCOLL, LAUREN B. FLETCHER,
MADELEINE C. LAUPHEIMER, LOUIS W. TOMPROS.
PATRICK JOSEPH COYNE, Finnegan, Henderson,
Farabow, Garrett & Dunner, LLP, Washington, DC, ar-
gued appellee. Also represented by SYDNEY KESTLE,
JEFFREY CURTISS TOTTEN; BENJAMIN AARON SAIDMAN, At-
lanta, GA.
______________________
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2 GENERAL ELECTRIC COMPANY v. RAYTHEON TECHNOLOGIES
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Before LOURIE, REYNA, and HUGHES, Circuit Judges.
HUGHES, Circuit Judge.
General Electric Company appeals the Patent Trial
and Appeal Board’s decision finding Raytheon Technolo-
gies Corporation’s gas turbine engine patent not unpatent-
able for obviousness. Raytheon moved to dismiss the
appeal for lack of standing. Because General Electric al-
leged sufficient facts to establish that it is engaging in ac-
tivity that creates a substantial risk of future
infringement, GE has standing to bring its appeal. As to
the merits of the appeal, we vacate the Board’s decision and
remand the case for further consideration because the
Board lacked substantial evidence for its conclusions.
I
Raytheon (known as United Technologies Corporation
during the appealed proceedings) and GE vigorously com-
pete in the market to supply propulsion engines to the com-
mercial aviation industry. This dispute revolves around
the validity of Raytheon’s patent’s claims to a two-stage
high pressure turbine engine for commercial airplanes and
whether those claims would have been obvious in light of
the prior art.
A
We begin with a brief technical background. This dis-
pute centers on turbofan gas turbine engines used to propel
commercial airliners. See J.A. 1182. Turbofan engines rely
on four main component sections—the fan, compressor,
combustor, and turbine—to generate thrust from the con-
tinuous ignition of a mixture of fuel and pressurized air.
J.A. 1183.
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J.A. 1184. To do so, air enters the fan, which accelerates
the air using rotating airfoil “blades.” Id. The specific en-
gines here are high-bypass-ratio turbofans, in which a por-
tion of the air, after passing through the fan, immediately
exits the engine to generate thrust from the momentum im-
parted upon it by the fan. J.A. 1185. That air is known as
the “bypass flow.” Id. The rest of the air from the fan en-
ters the engine “core,” or the compressor, combustor, and
turbine sections. Id. That air is known as the “core flow.”
Id. The ratio of bypass flow to core flow is called the bypass
ratio. For commercial airliners, a higher bypass ratio (i.e.,
more bypass flow for a given amount of core flow) increases
fuel efficiency. See J.A. 1797.
The compressor and turbine sections are further di-
vided into high- and low-pressure segments. J.A. 1183.
Each of the high- and low-pressure compressor and turbine
sections consist of stages, or a “a matched set of rotating
blades and stationary airfoils.” See Gen. Elec. Co. v. United
Techs. Corp., No. IPR2017-00428, 2018 WL 3105491, at *7
n.6 (P.T.A.B. June 22, 2018) (Final Written Decision); J.A.
1186. In the figure above, these stages are represented by
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vertical black lines extending from the central axis in the
compressor and turbine sections of the engine. J.A. 1186,
n.1. Core flow air is pressurized in the compressor section
before it enters the combustor, where it is mixed with fuel
and ignites. The resulting hot gas enters the turbine where
the expansion of the gas powers the turbine’s rotating
blades. See Appellant’s Br. 7–8.
Artisans refer to the grouping of the high-pressure
compressor and high-pressure turbine as the “high [pres-
sure] spool” and the grouping of the fan, low-pressure com-
pressor, and low-pressure turbine as the “low spool.” Id.
In a conventional “direct-drive” turbofan engine the com-
ponents comprising the low spool are all connected to the
same shaft and rotate at the same speed. See Appellant’s
Br. 8. The technology here, however, involves a “geared”
turbofan, which uses a gearbox mounted between the low-
pressure compressor and the fan to reduce the rotational
speed of the fan compared to the low-pressure compressor
and low-pressure turbine. Id. In a high-bypass-ratio tur-
bofan, the fan has a much larger diameter than the engine
core components; this discrepancy in diameter leads to a
discrepancy in the ideal rotational speed of the fan com-
pared to the low-pressure turbine. See J.A. 3269.
By introducing a gearbox that allows the fan to rotate
more slowly than the rest of the low spool, each component
can run at an operating point much closer to its optimal
rotational speed, yielding many benefits. Some of these
benefits include:
(1) improving the propulsive efficiency of the fan, re-
ducing engine fuel consumption;
(2) improving the aerodynamic efficiency of the low-
pressure turbine, allowing a simpler and less costly design;
(3) reducing the mechanical stress on the fan, improv-
ing safety and reliability;
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(4) reducing torque on the low-spool shaft connecting
the low-pressure compressor and turbine to the fan (or
gearbox), allowing the use of a smaller-diameter shaft; and;
(5) reducing engine noise caused by high fan rotational
speeds. See, e.g., J.A. 1333, 1351, 1361, 1797–98.
B
In 2011, Raytheon applied for the patent that issued as
U.S. Patent Number 8,695,920, entitled “Gas Turbine En-
gine with Low Stage Count Low Pressure Turbine.” Ac-
cording to the background, the invention relates to “an
engine mounting configuration for the mounting of a tur-
bofan gas turbine engine to an aircraft pylon.” ’920 patent
at 1:13–15. Although much of the written description fo-
cuses on the “static structure” of the engine used to help
mount the turbofan to an aircraft, see, e.g., ’920 patent
at cols. 5–7, the patent claims certain inventions involving
particular turbofan gas turbine engine configurations. The
claims in dispute, dependent claims 10–14, relate to a
“method of designing a gas turbine engine” comprising cer-
tain of these architectural features and performance pa-
rameters. Each claim depends from independent claim 9,
reproduced below.
9. A method of designing a gas turbine engine com-
prising:
providing a core nacelle defined about an
engine centerline axis;
providing a fan nacelle mounted at least
partially around said core nacelle to define
a fan bypass flow path for a fan bypass air-
flow;
providing a gear train within said core na-
celle;
providing a first spool along said engine
centerline axis within said core nacelle to
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drive said gear train, said first spool in-
cludes a first turbine section including be-
tween three–six (3–6) stages, and a first
compressor section;
providing a second spool along said engine
centerline axis within said core nacelle,
said second spool includes a second turbine
section including at least two (2) stages and
a second compressor section;
providing a fan including a plurality of fan
blades to be driven through the gear train
by the first spool, wherein the bypass flow
path is configured to provide a bypass ratio
of airflow through the bypass flow path di-
vided by airflow through the core nacelle
that is greater than about six (6) during en-
gine operation.
’920 patent at 8:14–34. Claim 10 claims the method of
claim 9, adding the limitation that “said first turbine sec-
tion defines a pressure ratio that is greater than about five
(5.0).” Id. at 8:35–37. Claim 11 depends from claim 10’s
method, adding the limitation that “a fan pressure ratio
across the plurality of fan blades is less than about 1.45.”
Id. at 8:38–41. Claim 12 depends from claim 11, adding
the limitation that “the gear train is configured to provide
a speed reduction ratio greater than about 2.5:1.” Id. at
8:42–44. Claim 13 depends from claim 12, further requir-
ing that “the plurality of fan blades [be] configured to ro-
tate at a fan tip speed of less than about 1150 feet/second
during engine operation.” Id. at 8:44–46. Finally, claim 14
depends from claim 13, requiring, together with all the lim-
itations disclosed in claims 9–13, that “the second turbine
section includes two (2) stages.” Id. at 8:47–48.
As the parties do, we will refer to the “first” spool, tur-
bine, and compressor as the low-pressure spool, turbine,
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and compressor; the “second” spool, turbine, and compres-
sor, as the high-pressure spool, turbine, and compressor.
The ’920 patent issued in April 2014. In December
2016, GE petitioned the Patent Trial and Appeal Board for
inter partes review of claims 1–4, 7–14, 17, and 19 of the
’920 patent. In its petition, GE asserted that claims 1, 4,
9–14, 17, and 19 were unpatentable as obvious based on
the combination of two prior art references, Wendus and
Moxon.
C
Wendus—Follow-On Technology Requirement Study
for Advanced Subsonic Transport, by Bruce E. Wendus, et
al.—is a research paper by four employees of Raytheon sub-
sidiary Pratt & Whitney, published internally in August
1995 before being publicly distributed as a NASA “contrac-
tor report” in August 2003. Wendus provides a computa-
tional study comparing a “baseline,” “state-of-the-art” 1995
turbofan engine to a hypothetical advanced technology en-
gine it dubs the “Advanced Ducted Propulsor” that incor-
porates technology thought to be feasible for engines
entering service in 2005. J.A. 1310–12. Wendus compares
these engines to determine the advanced engine’s perfor-
mance gains and its effects on the economics of airline op-
eration compared to the baseline. Id. Wendus then
suggests future research for technologies that are “critical
or enabling” to implementing the advanced engine’s design
and attaining its performance advantages. J.A. 1311. In
its description of the advanced engine, Wendus discloses all
elements of claims 9–14 except that it teaches a one-stage
high-pressure turbine instead of the “at-least-two-stage”
high-pressure turbine taught in claim 9 and narrowed to
two stages in claim 14. See J.A. 16.
Moxon is a July 1983 magazine article—How to Save
Fuel in Tomorrow’s Engines, by Julian Moxon—published
in FLIGHT International, a long-running weekly aviation
magazine. Among other topics, Moxon discusses how the
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high-pressure turbine of a turbofan engine can be modified
to improve fuel consumption. Moxon concludes that be-
cause of increased performance demands on the high-pres-
sure turbine required to improve fuel efficiency, “a move to
one instead of two HP turbine stages is thought unlikely,
although designs have been carried out and demonstra-
tions have been run.” J.A. 1360–61.
Before the Board decided to institute inter partes re-
view of the ’920 patent based on GE’s Wendus and Moxon
combination, Raytheon disclaimed claims 1–4, 7, 8, 17, and
19. The Board then instituted review of only claims 9–14.
See generally Gen. Elec. Co. v. United Techs. Corp., No.
IPR2017-00428, 2017 WL 2785055, at *2 (P.T.A.B. June
26, 2017). The Board had also instituted review of inde-
pendent claim 9 in a separate inter partes review; Ray-
theon disclaimed claim 9 while that dispute was ongoing.
The Board was then left to rule on only the patentability of
dependent claims 10–14 of the ’920 patent.
II
In its final written decision, the Board found dependent
claim 10, and thus dependent claims 11–14, nonobvious.
Final Written Decision at *5. In so deciding, the Board
found that the prior art disclosed all limitations in claim
10. Id. at *7. In particular, it found that “high pressure
turbines used in . . . gas turbine engines prior to the ’920
patent generally had either one stage or two stages,” mak-
ing high-pressure turbine stage-count selection a “binary
choice.” Id. at *10. The Board found that, in making this
binary choice, an artisan would have known of various
tradeoffs between either choice. Id. The Board found the
two-stage high-pressure turbine of Moxon to advanta-
geously “reduce[] the stress placed on the turbine, and pro-
vide[] a higher efficiency, versus a one-stage turbine,
thereby improving the life, reliability, and fuel consump-
tion of the turbine.” Id.
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The Board then found that “Wendus expressly consid-
ered at least some of the one-stage versus two-stage
tradeoffs and specifically chose the one-stage option.” Id.
at *11. According to the Board, this express consideration
meant that Wendus taught away from combination with
Moxon—despite the Board’s prior findings about the bene-
fits of the two-stage high-pressure turbine. Id. The Board
alternatively held that, even if Wendus did not teach away
from combination with Moxon, “the evidence presented in
this proceeding as a whole does not persuasively demon-
strate a motivation to modify” Wendus to “include [Moxon’s
teaching of] a two-stage high pressure turbine.” Id. And
according to the Board, GE did “not establish[] the obvious-
ness of claim 10, when considered as a whole.” Id. at *14.
In support of this last conclusion, the Board found that GE
did not “provide a persuasive motivation or justification for
why a person of ordinary skill in the art, when modifying
the Wendus [advanced] engine to include a two-stage high
pressure turbine, would maintain the other claimed pa-
rameters within the scope of claim 10.” Id. at *15.
GE filed a request for rehearing challenging the
Board’s application of the legal standard for both teaching
away and motivation to combine. The Board denied its re-
quest for rehearing. See Gen. Elec. Co. v. United Techs.
Corp., No. IPR2017-00428, 2018 WL 5099737 at *4
(P.T.A.B. Oct. 18, 2018). GE timely appealed. We have ju-
risdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1295(a)(4)(A).
III
Before reaching the merits, we must first address our
authority to decide this case. Raytheon moved to dismiss
this appeal for lack of standing. See Gen. Elec. Co. v. Ray-
theon Techs. Corp., No. 2019-1319, ECF No. 17. The mo-
tion panel denied the motion, instead asking the parties to
address standing in their merits briefing. See id., ECF No.
26. After briefing and argument, we agree with GE that it
has alleged facts establishing that it is currently engaged
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in conduct creating a substantial risk of infringement of the
’920 patent, and thus has standing for this appeal.
Raytheon argues that because it has never “sued or
threatened to sue GE” for infringing the ’920 patent, and
because GE “had never alleged that an engine exists that
presents a concrete and substantial risk of infringing the
’920 patent,” GE lacks standing to appeal the Board’s deci-
sion. Appellee’s Br. 1. Elaborating on the latter point, Ray-
theon argues that GE’s allegations of a risk of infringement
rely on events in the past or speculation about GE’s engi-
neering and business choices in the future. Raytheon as-
serts that this case presents “substantially similar
evidence and arguments” to a previous standing dispute
between these parties, Gen. Elec. Co. v. United Techs.
Corp., 928 F.3d 1349 (Fed. Cir. 2019), cert. denied sub nom.
Gen. Elec. Co. v. Raytheon Techs. Corp., No. 19-1012, 2020
WL 2622041 (U.S. May 26, 2020), and that we should dis-
miss this appeal, as we did with that appeal. Appellee’s Br.
1. GE responds that it has alleged facts that show it “is
currently undertaking activities” likely to lead Raytheon to
sue it for infringement. Appellant’s Reply Br. 1.
A
“Although we have jurisdiction to review final decisions
of the Board under 28 U.S.C. § 1295(a)(4)(A), an appellant
must meet ‘the irreducible constitutional minimum of
standing.’” Amerigen Pharm. Ltd. v. UCB Pharma GmBH,
913 F.3d 1076, 1082 (Fed. Cir. 2019) (quoting Lujan v. De-
fenders of Wildlife, 504 U.S. 555, 560 (1992)). That “irre-
ducible constitutional minimum” requires the appellant to
“have (1) suffered an injury in fact, (2) that is fairly trace-
able to the challenged conduct of the [appellee], and
(3) that is likely to be redressed by a favorable judicial de-
cision.” Spokeo, Inc. v. Robins, 136 S. Ct. 1540, 1547 (2016),
as revised (May 24, 2016). “[W]here Congress has accorded
a procedural right to a litigant, such as the right to appeal
an administrative decision” some requirements of
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standing—but not the requirement of injury in fact—“may
be relaxed.” Consumer Watchdog v. Wis. Alumni Research
Found., 753 F.3d 1258, 1261 (Fed. Cir. 2014). The standing
dispute here, then, centers on whether GE has alleged an
injury in fact.
When an appellant “relies on potential infringement li-
ability as a basis for injury in fact, but is not currently en-
gaging in infringing activity, it must establish that it has
concrete plans for future activity that creates a substantial
risk of future infringement or would likely cause the pa-
tentee to assert a claim of infringement.” JTEKT Corp. v.
GKN Auto. LTD., 898 F.3d 1217, 1221 (Fed. Cir. 2018), cert.
denied, 139 S. Ct. 2713 (2019); accord Susan B. Anthony
List v. Driehaus, 573 U.S. 149, 158 (2014) (“An allegation
of future injury may suffice if the threatened injury is ‘cer-
tainly impending,’ or there is a ‘“substantial risk” that the
harm will occur.’” (quoting Clapper v. Amnesty Int’l USA,
568 U.S. 398, 414 (2013))).
Since JTEKT, this court has explained that “to estab-
lish the requisite injury in an appeal from a final written
decision in an inter partes review,” “[a]n appellant need not
face ‘a specific threat of infringement litigation by the pa-
tentee[.]’” Adidas AG v. Nike, Inc., 963 F.3d 1355, 1357
(Fed. Cir. 2020) (quoting E.I. DuPont de Nemours & Co. v.
Synvina C.V., 904 F.3d 996, 1004 (Fed. Cir. 2018)). “In-
stead, ‘it is generally sufficient for the appellant to show
that it has engaged in, is engaging in, or will likely engage
in activity that would give rise to a possible infringement
suit.’” Id. (quoting Grit Energy Sols., LLC v. Oren Techs.,
LLC, 957 F.3d 1309, 1319 (Fed. Cir. 2020)).
“GE has the burden of showing that it suffered an in-
jury in fact sufficient to confer Article III standing to ap-
peal.” Gen. Elec. Co., 928 F.3d at 1353. “[T]he summary
judgment burden of production applies in cases where an
appellant seeks review of a final agency action and its
standing comes into doubt.” Phigenix, Inc. v. Immunogen,
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Inc., 845 F.3d 1168, 1172–73 (Fed. Cir. 2017). As a result,
“[w]e accept as true [an appellant’s] material representa-
tions of fact for purposes of assessing its standing.” Amer-
igen, 913 F.3d at 1083. GE has met its requisite burden of
production to show that it will likely engage in activity that
would prompt an infringement suit.
GE has made concrete plans for future activity. It
spent $10–12 million in 2019 developing a geared turbofan
architecture and design. DiTommaso Decl. ¶ 24. Because
of customer requirements for the lucrative next-generation
narrow body market segment, GE intends to keep develop-
ing its geared turbofan engine design; that design is GE’s
technologically preferred design for the next-generation
narrow body market. Id. In fact, GE has offered this pre-
ferred geared turbofan design to Airbus in response to a
request for information Airbus dispatched for its next-gen-
eration narrow body aircraft. Id. ¶ 22.
Although none of these statements prove that GE will
select this engine as its final bid for the Airbus next-gener-
ation narrow body program or for any other aircraft pro-
grams, “[a]ctivities that ‘will likely’—but might not—occur
in the future can be sufficient to confer standing . . . .” Grit
Energy, 957 F.3d at 1320. GE’s specific investment in con-
tinued development of a geared turbofan engine design, its
avowed preference to offer this design for sale, and its in-
formal offer of this engine to Airbus in an ongoing bidding
process together establish that GE will likely engage in the
sale of this geared turbofan engine design to customers. Cf.
JTEKT, 898 F.3d at 1220 (noting that “[t]he fact that
JTEKT has no product on the market at the present time
does not preclude Article III standing,” but finding that
JTEKT lacked standing because its potentially infringe-
ment product design was so preliminary that it could not
yet be analyzed for infringement).
GE has also established that such a sale would raise a
substantial risk of an infringement suit. According to the
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sworn statement of GE Aviation’s Chief IP Counsel, “GE
fully expects that [Raytheon] would accuse this engine of
infringing of the ’920 patent . . . .” Long Decl. ¶ 9. The
most reasonable inference from this statement is that GE
believes its preferred design raises a substantial risk of in-
fringement. 1 “IPR petitioners need not concede infringe-
ment to establish standing to appeal.” JTEKT, 898 F.3d
at 1221. Beyond explicit statements that this preferred
geared turbofan design includes a gear train driven by the
low-pressure spool and a two-stage high-pressure turbine,
see DiTommaso Decl. ¶ 22; 2d DiTommaso Decl. ¶ 5, GE
only obliquely alludes to how its preferred engine design
meets the claimed limitations. See 2d DiTommaso Decl.
¶ 3–4 (declaring that “virtually every turbofan engine” has
certain claimed features such as the core and fan nacelles,
low-pressure and high-pressure spools and rotating ma-
chinery, and fan, and that to provide a “commercially com-
petitive engine,” the engine must meet certain other claim
limitations, such as a bypass ratio of at least seven.). Alt-
hough GE does itself no favors by making its allegations so
coyly, GE’s declarations plausibly establish that its pre-
ferred next-generation engine design substantially risks
infringing the ’920 patent. 2
1 The alternative would be to infer that GE’s counsel
presumes Raytheon will file a baseless infringement suit.
We doubt that either party would prefer this inference.
2 We also note that independent claim 9, from which
the disputed claims depend, claims a “method of designing
a gas turbine engine.” ’920 patent at 8:14–34. This con-
trasts with disclaimed independent claim 1, which recites
“a gas turbine engine” comprising elements nearly identi-
cal to those recited in the steps of claim 9’s method. See id.
at 7:43–58. Given GE’s concession that Raytheon would
accuse its preferred next-generation engine of infringing
the ’920 patent, and that GE continues to develop this
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B
Our conclusion today that GE has shown concrete
plans raising a substantial risk of future infringement fully
harmonizes with our conclusion that GE failed to do so in
the prior dispute between these parties. GE’s allegations
of fact in the prior case left a great deal to the imagination.
For example, we faulted GE for “contend[ing] only that GE
expended some unspecified amount of time and money to
consider engine designs that could potentially implicate
the” patent at issue in that case. Gen. Elec. Co., 928 F.3d
at 1353. We also criticized GE for “provid[ing] no evidence
that GE actually designed a geared-fan engine . . . .” Id. at
1354. And we condemned GE for providing “no evidence
that GE is in the process of designing an engine covered by”
the disputed claims. Id. GE’s factual allegations here ad-
dress all of these specific deficiencies and provide overall
much more support for its assertions that it has made
design, GE may be now infringing the ’920 patent by its
method of designing the engine. If currently infringing, GE
would undeniably have standing. “A patent claim could
have a harmful competitive effect on a would-be challenger
if the challenger was currently using the claimed fea-
tures . . . .” AVX Corp. v. Presidio Components, Inc.,
923 F.3d 1357, 1365 (Fed. Cir. 2019) (emphasis in original).
Whether GE’s method for designing its engine offends the
patent is unclear: the Board did not construe this “method
for designing” preamble, the contours of the “method of de-
signing” the engine are not apparent on the face of the ’920
patent, and GE does not develop arguments on this point
outside a footnote in a reply brief. See Appellant’s Reply
Br. at 7 n.3. That said, the claims at issue covering the
design process rather than the final product favors finding
standing during the design process, even if GE never offers
for sale an engine meeting the claimed parameters.
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concrete plans raising a substantial risk of infringement of
the ’920 patent.
Our criticisms of GE’s factual allegations in the prior
case were well-earned. In that case, GE submitted an ini-
tial declaration of its Aviation-division Chief IP counsel al-
leging only that, in a mid-1970s research program, GE had
developed a similar turbofan engine design to the claimed
design and still owned several engines of that design. Long
Decl. ¶¶ 14–15, Gen. Elec. Co. v. United Techs. Corp.,
No. 2017–2497 (Fed. Cir. Jan. 16, 2018), ECF No. 36. GE
did not suggest that Raytheon would accuse that design of
infringement—GE opined generally that Raytheon had “a
history of threatening the aviation industry with their pa-
tent portfolio.” Id. ¶ 17. Instead, GE alleged that its ina-
bility to use its design, or the fruits of its research into that
design, would “result[] in economic harm to GE, by increas-
ing its research, development, and design costs,” and cause
“competitive harm by limiting GE’s ability to compete in
the supply of engines to aircraft makers.” Id. ¶ 15. GE
noted that it was “discussing with airframers possible fu-
ture engine designs for next-generation aircraft applica-
tions,” but never specified that it had developed or offered
a potentially infringing modern design. Id. ¶ 16. Instead,
it only referred to an infringing design as a “valid option[].”
Id. ¶ 22.
GE sought to patch some of these holes with a second
declaration from the Aviation Chief IP Counsel. See Suppl.
Long Dec., Gen. Elec. Co. v. United Techs. Corp., No. 2017–
2497 (Fed. Cir. Nov. 28, 2018), ECF No. 64. This declara-
tion gave more details of “discuss[ions] with airframers”
about future engine designs, noting that GE had submitted
information to Boeing “regarding various engine architec-
tures potentially meeting Boeing’s requirements” for its
new mid-market aircraft, including one engine architec-
ture including some features of the disputed patent claim.
Suppl. Long Dec. ¶¶ 4–5. Even so, GE had only “investi-
gated and discussed with Boeing the possible use” of a
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design that would “potentially implicate” the patent claims
at issue. Id. ¶ 5. GE made vague and conclusory allega-
tions that “[i]n response to Boeing’s request, GE expended
time and money researching and further developing [an]
engine architecture” implicating the patent claims “with
the option” of using the key inventive feature of those
claims. Id. ¶ 7. These shaky allegations were weakened
even more because the bidding for that Boeing new mid-
market aircraft engine had ended before the appeal—and
GE’s bid had employed a design not implicating the patent.
Id. ¶ 9.
Considered together, all the allegations in the prior
case relevant to this analysis were not just speculative, but
overtly theoretical. GE did not allege concrete plans for
future activity that would raise a future risk of infringe-
ment. It alleged that it had spent money in the past to de-
velop technology that it might consider using in the future.
GE’s factual allegations here are in stark contrast.
To recap, here, GE has alleged that it has conceived a
geared turbofan engine design that Raytheon would likely
argue falls within the scope of claims 10–14 of the ’920 pa-
tent. It has alleged specific ongoing expenditures in 2019
of $10–12 million to continue to develop and refine that de-
sign. And it provides that this geared turbofan engine de-
sign is its preferred engine design to offer to its customers
for the next-generation narrow body market segment.
More concretely, GE identifies an Airbus aircraft program
where it intends to offer this design for sale to Airbus. And
GE supports the concreteness of these plans by showing
that it in fact submitted the design to Airbus for the pre-
liminary stage of the bidding process. It has not yet sub-
mitted any other design to Airbus. Finally, GE alleges that
it believes Raytheon would accuse this specific design of in-
fringement. These new factual allegations remedy the
problems we identified in the prior appeal.
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By remedying those shortcomings, GE has met the re-
quirements for establishing standing. Cf. AVX Corp. v.
Presidio Components, Inc., 923 F.3d 1357, 1365 (Fed. Cir.
2019) (finding that AVX was not engaging in, and did not
have non-speculative plans to engage in, conduct covered
by the patent at issue because “AVX does not assert, for
example, that it is developing a new capacitor that Presidio
would likely argue falls within the scope of the upheld
claims.”). We therefore turn to the merits of GE’s appeal.
IV
We “review the Board’s compliance with the governing
legal standards de novo and its underlying factual deter-
minations for substantial evidence.” Belden Inc. v. Berk-
Tek LLC, 805 F.3d 1064, 1073 (Fed. Cir. 2015). Obvious-
ness is a question of law, based on underlying factual find-
ings. See In re Baxter Int’l, Inc., 678 F.3d 1357, 1361
(Fed. Cir. 2012). Relevant underlying factual questions
here include whether a prior art reference teaches away,
Icon Health & Fitness, Inc. v. Strava, Inc., 849 F.3d 1034,
1047–48 (Fed. Cir. 2017); whether a skilled artisan would
have been motivated to combine references, see Medichem,
S.A. v. Rolabo, S.L., 437 F.3d 1157, 1164–65 (Fed. Cir.
2006); and a skilled artisan’s reasonable expectation of suc-
cess in combining references. PAR Pharm., Inc. v. TWI
Pharm., Inc., 773 F.3d 1186, 1196–97 (Fed. Cir. 2014).
GE highlights deficiencies in all three of the Board’s
conclusions undergirding its holding of non-obviousness.
GE asserts that the Board erred by misreading Wendus to
find that it disparages or discourages the use of a two-stage
high pressure turbine, and therefore erred in finding that
Wendus taught away from a two-stage high-pressure tur-
bine. GE also argues that, in the alternative to its teaching
away finding, the Board applied an overly rigorous require-
ment for motivation to combine the Wendus and Moxon ref-
erences. In particular, GE asserts that the Board erred in
its conclusion that no motivation to combine existed, for at
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least the reason that the Board made explicit findings that
should constitute an adequate motivation to combine. GE
argues that the Board also erred by requiring GE to show
that an artisan would be motivated to retain the claimed
performance parameters taught in Wendus in combining
Wendus and Moxon.
Raytheon, for its part, argues that we must affirm the
Board’s decision if we find substantial evidence that
(1) Wendus teaches away from modifying its advanced en-
gine to add a two-stage high-pressure turbine; (2) no mat-
ter if Wendus teaches away, Wendus discloses a strong
preference for a one-stage high-pressure turbine, under-
mining GE’s motivation-to-combine arguments; or (3) GE
failed to establish a motivation for modifying the Wendus
advanced engine to achieve the invention of claim 10, “as a
whole.”
We agree with Raytheon that we must affirm if we find
substantial evidence of any of these. But we find the Board
lacked substantial evidence for each finding.
A
The Board lacked substantial evidence for its finding
that Wendus teaches away from using a two-stage high
pressure turbine. The Board correctly set forth the stand-
ard for teaching away, Final Written Decision at *11,
providing a long quote from Polaris Indus., Inc. v. Arctic
Cat, Inc., 882 F.3d 1056 (Fed. Cir. 2018), in which this
court explained that “[a] reference does not teach away ‘if
it merely expresses a general preference for an alternative
invention but does not “criticize, discredit, or otherwise dis-
courage” investigation into the invention claimed.’” Id.
(quoting DePuy Spine, Inc. v. Medtronic Sofamor Danek,
Inc., 567 F.3d 1314, 1327 (Fed. Cir. 2009)). In applying this
standard, however, the Board found that criticism of the
use of a two-stage high-pressure turbine in prior art—at
most—suggests a general preference for a one-stage high-
pressure turbine.
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But in summarizing its evidence, the Board found that
Wendus discourages the use of a two-stage high-pressure
turbine rather than merely suggesting a general prefer-
ence for a one-stage high-pressure turbine because
Wendus describes the one-stage turbine as a criti-
cal and enabling technology providing significant
advantages over a prior art engine having a two-
stage turbine, with such advantages representa-
tively including reduced weight and cost. A person
of ordinary skill in the art would have known that
modifying the Wendus [advanced] engine to in-
clude a two-stage turbine would have increased the
weight and cost of the engine, which Wendus criti-
cizes, discredits, or otherwise discourages.
Final Written Decision at *13. Wendus simply does not
support these conclusions.
Wendus cannot be accurately characterized as defining
a single-stage turbine as a “critical” or “enabling” technol-
ogy, as the Board found. The reference to “critical or ena-
bling” technology comes from Table 16 of Wendus, which
provides a “a component-by-component identification of 39
technology improvements” that are “critical or enabling” to
the Wendus advanced engine, “along with the attendant
characteristic and system benefits” of those technologies.
J.A. 1351. The table lists a single-stage high-pressure tur-
bine not as a “critical or enabling” technology, but as the
“[s]ystem [b]enefit” of three technologies the table de-
scribes as “critical” technologies: “[i]mproved strength
shaft material,” “[i]mproved disk material,” and
“[a]dvanced turbine blade attachment.” J.A. 1353.
The correct reading of Table 16 in the full context of
Wendus establishes that the improved shaft and disk ma-
terials and advanced turbine blade attachment encompass
the “critical” technologies. Wendus explains that the one-
stage high-pressure turbine suffers from “substantial me-
chanical and structural challenges” resulting from the
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“high wheel speed and [] large rotor annulus area” used in
the advanced engine high-pressure turbine design “to re-
duce losses in the turbine.” J.A. 1320. Table 16 of Wendus
itself explains that the improved shaft material, improved
disk material, and advanced turbine blade attachment pro-
vide the characteristic benefit of allowing increased wheel
speed and rotor annulus area. The development of these
three technologies makes feasible the high wheel speed and
large rotor annulus area used in the Wendus advanced en-
gine to mitigate the aerodynamic losses inherent in the
one-stage high-pressure turbines. See J.A. 1320, 2941–42.
Thus, the single-stage high-pressure turbine is not the
“critical or enabling” technology, but a system benefit that
cannot be implemented into an advanced engine without
successful development of other “critical and enabling”
technologies. Table 16 shows a general preference for a
one-stage turbine. But the difference between a “critical or
enabling” technology and a mere “system benefit” under-
mines the Board’s conclusion that Wendus displays a
“strong preference” for the one-stage turbine. 3
Additionally, Wendus itself only weakly supports that
a one-stage high-pressure turbine has weight and cost ad-
vantages over a two-stage high pressure turbine. At sev-
eral points in Wendus, the authors describe particular
advantages of their advanced engine concept. In none of
these sections does Wendus set forth a single-stage high-
pressure turbine or the reduced weight and cost of the sin-
gle-stage design as an advantage of its planned advanced
engine. See J.A. 1310 (Summary); J.A. 1333 (2005 EIS
ADP Advantage); J.A. 1350 (Conclusions).
3 Wendus leaves the exact “system benefit” of the
single-stage high-pressure turbine design undefined—re-
inforcing the generality of Wendus’s general preference for
a one-stage high-pressure turbine.
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Wendus does provide that the advanced engine in-
cludes technology advances like “significant reductions in
weight, price, and maintenance cost in the [high-pressure
compressor] and [high-pressure turbine].” J.A. 1349 (acro-
nyms for the components altered to the full name). But
these reductions in weight, price, and maintenance cost are
not definitively derived from a reduced stage count: “The
[advanced engine] represents significant technology ad-
vances compared to present day engines because the [ad-
vanced engine’s] components assume 10 years technology
advancement.” Id. And these technological advances
yielding weight, price, and maintenance cost reductions do
not relate solely to the reduction in stage count. See
J.A. 1353 (listing, for example, that “[i]mproved thermal
barrier coating” will allow increased combustor exit tem-
perature while maintaining turbine part life, benefiting the
engine by “reduc[ing] . . . maintenance cost”).
Although a skilled artisan may intuitively understand
that a one-stage turbine may be lighter and cheaper to
manufacture and maintain than a two-stage turbine, Wen-
dus itself does not criticize the use of a two-stage turbine
for weight or cost reasons. In discussing the high-pressure
turbine specifically, Wendus never compares weight and
cost of a single-stage turbine with that of a two-stage tur-
bine. See J.A. 1320. Instead, Wendus notes that “[t]he [sin-
gle-stage turbine] design results in a combination of high
efficiency (low fuel burn) at a minimum number of parts
(lower acquisition and maintenance costs).” J.A. 1320.
But Wendus references neither efficiency nor number
of parts in comparison to any other high-pressure turbine
design. And Wendus discusses other design choices for the
high-pressure turbine that would alter the cost and weight
of the turbine—like airfoil count, design expansion ratio,
wheel speed, and rotor annulus area. J.A. 1320. The choice
of stage count will influence these choices, (and vice versa)
but all these parameters have independent significance
and may be changed without changing the stage count.
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See, e.g., J.A. 1319 (noting that, in Wendus’s study of an
eight-stage high-pressure compressor, “22 additional air-
foils were required [within the one-stage high-pressure tur-
bine] to maintain efficiency”).
This lack of even implicit comparison between a one-
and two-stage turbine based on weight and cost differences
is peculiar because Wendus actually offers implicit compar-
isons between one-stage and two-stage high-pressure tur-
bine designs on other bases. And notably, these
comparisons are unfavorable to the one-stage design.
Table 1 of Wendus shows that the advanced engine
(one-stage) high-pressure turbine has a lower aerodynamic
efficiency than the baseline engine (two-stage) high-pres-
sure turbine, with an asterisk noting that advanced engine
efficiency result is “[s]ingle stage based.” J.A. 1312. This
implicit comparison of the aerodynamic efficiency of a one-
stage and two-stage turbine is reinforced by Wendus’s ex-
plicit acknowledgment that the single-stage high-pressure
turbine contributed to a reduction in the advanced engine’s
fuel efficiency compared to the two-stage turbine in the
baseline. J.A. 1323.
The dearth of explicit comparisons between a one-stage
and two-stage turbine designs also contrasts with the overt
comparison of the benefits of different numbers of stages in
the high-pressure compressor. Wendus distinctly studied
the differences between a six-stage and eight-stage design,
explicitly noted its findings, and pointedly noted the re-
duced engine length and airfoil count of the six-stage de-
sign made it preferable to the eight-stage design.
J.A. 1317–19.
And even if an artisan recognized that a one-stage tur-
bine would have led to reduced engine weight and lower
engine cost than a two-stage turbine, Wendus is hardly
consistent in indicating that weight and cost concerns
alone mandate the correct design choices of an improved
engine, compared to other factors like fuel efficiency or
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reliability. For example, the Wendus advanced engine
costs more both to produce and to maintain than the base-
line engine. See J.A. 1344. The advanced engine also
weighs more than the baseline engine—and even has a
lower thrust-to-weight ratio. J.A. 1343. Given that the ad-
vanced engine weighs more and costs more, it is hard to
conclude that reduced weight and cost are paramount to
the teachings of Wendus.
Besides the fact that Wendus used a one-stage high-
pressure turbine design and not a two-stage design, Wen-
dus provides no evidence that reduced weight and cost of
the one-stage design is preferable to the improved aerody-
namic—and therefore fuel—efficiency of the two-stage de-
sign. Rather, in preferring the advanced engine to the
baseline engine, Wendus teaches that a heavier and more
expensive engine is preferable—at least if this engine pro-
vides the attendant benefits of the advanced engine, i.e.,
fuel efficiency. See J.A. 1333 (highlighting reduced thrust-
specific fuel consumption as a benefit of the advanced en-
gine).
Moreover, other than the bare statement that a single-
stage high-pressure turbine provides an unexplained “sys-
tem benefit,” Wendus does not straightforwardly explain
that its use of a one-stage high-pressure turbine in the ad-
vanced engine was a choice based on a design preference
for that turbine, as the Board concludes. The engine core—
the portion encompassing the high-pressure compressor,
combustor, and high-pressure turbine—used for Wendus’s
advanced engine was an “85 percent scale version of [Ray-
theon’s pre-existing] Advanced Technology Common Core”
engine design. J.A. 1313. That Wendus adopted a pre-ex-
isting engine core design without suggesting that it chose
the existing core for its use of a single-stage high-pressure
turbine undercuts the inference that Wendus has a “strong
preference” for a single-stage high-pressure turbine. To be
sure, the baseline engine used a two-stage turbine, sug-
gesting that Wendus was moving away from that design.
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But that choice alone does not show the benefits of a one-
stage turbine design, or the drawbacks of a two-stage tur-
bine design. An artisan could conclude based on Wendus
that the single-stage turbine represented part of an “ad-
vanced turbofan” core that improves fuel efficiency. J.A.
1312. But this is not a repudiation—or even discourage-
ment—of a two-stage turbine, which other parts of Wendus
note improves fuel efficiency compared to a one-stage tur-
bine.
And the Board’s assertion that Wendus “was designed
to use a one-stage high pressure turbine, in that other en-
gine components were specifically designed to accommo-
date the turbine,” Final Written Decision at *13, lacks
support in Wendus. Because the design of the fan, low-
pressure compressor, and low-pressure turbine allowed
them to “run at optimum speeds and efficiencies,” see
J.A. 1333, and enabled a “very high bypass ratio,” the
torque on the shaft transmitting power from the low-pres-
sure turbine to the low-pressure compressor and fan gear-
box greatly increased, see J.A. 1313 (detailing how changes
to the fan and low-pressure compressor increase the torque
on the low-spool shaft). And because of the increased pro-
pulsive efficiency of the fan in the advanced engine, the en-
gine core size could be decreased to 85 percent of the
original Advanced Technology Common Core. See J.A.
1333. This reduction in core size required the low-spool
shaft to fit within a smaller bore diameter. These changes
would greatly increase the stress on the low-spool shaft be-
yond what Wendus thought a material feasibly available in
2005 could withstand. J.A. 1313.
As a possible solution to this problem, Wendus investi-
gated modifying the core to have a larger bore diameter, so
that the engine could use a larger diameter low-spool shaft.
Id. But after performing this analysis, Wendus found that
the larger bore diameter would place too much stress on
the high-pressure turbine disk. Id. Because this modifica-
tion of the high-pressure turbine to accommodate the
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requirements of the low-spool shaft was not feasible, Wen-
dus modified other components until a low-spool shaft
made of a material feasibly used in 2005 could accommo-
date the stress. See J.A. 1313–14. Most accurately, Wen-
dus explored (but eventually rejected) modifying the
chosen one-stage high-pressure turbine’s disk bore diame-
ter to accommodate the new low-spool design. 4 And Wen-
dus makes no suggestion that this outcome would have
been different for a two-stage turbine, or that it did this
specifically so that it could avoid using a two-stage turbine.
Wendus designed other components of its advanced engine
to accommodate the high-pressure turbine—not for a one-
stage high-pressure turbine or a two-stage high-pressure
turbine, but for a mechanically robust high-pressure tur-
bine.
All of this goes to show that the Board’s conclusion that
Wendus “expressly weigh[ed] the tradeoffs [between a one-
stage and two-stage turbine] and cho[se] the one-stage op-
tion” cannot withstand scrutiny. Final Written Decision
at *11. Wendus never distinctly compares a one-stage
high-pressure turbine and a two-stage high-pressure tur-
bine. And when it compares the one-stage turbine of the
advanced engine to the two-stage turbine of the baseline
engine, implicitly comparing the designs, it notes the unfa-
vorable performance of the one-stage design. Disclosing
that one-stage high-pressure turbine design has an unde-
fined “system benefit” with the implication of improved
weight and cost, but “substantial,” yet-unsolved “mechani-
cal and structural challenges” to attain that benefit does
4 In addition, when Wendus modified the high-pres-
sure compressor by adding two stages, it modified the high-
pressure turbine (albeit not the stage count) to accommo-
date that change, further suggesting that the high-pres-
sure turbine design was hardly a sacrosanct key feature of
the advanced engine design. J.A. 1320.
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not teach away from the two-stage high-pressure turbine
design acknowledged to have better efficiency and thus to
improve the fuel consumption. Cf. Tyco Healthcare Grp.
LP v. Ethicon Endo–Surgery, Inc., 774 F.3d 968, 977 (Fed.
Cir. 2014) (“Yet simply because the curved blade configu-
rations are not preferred embodiments does not result in
the Davison patent teaching away from use of a curved
blade, ‘absent clear discouragement of that combination.’”
(quoting Santarus, Inc. v. Par Pharm., Inc., 694 F.3d 1344,
1356 (Fed. Cir. 2012))).
Wendus does not make a single negative statement
about the use of a two-stage high-pressure turbine; there-
fore, Wendus does not criticize, credit, or discourage the
use of a two-stage high-pressure turbine. For that reason,
substantial evidence does not support the Board’s conclu-
sion that “Wendus teaches away from modifying the Wen-
dus ADP engine to include the two-stage option.” Final
Written Decision at *11. Cf. Galderma Labs., L.P. v. Tol-
mar, Inc., 737 F.3d 731, 739 (Fed. Cir. 2013) (“A teaching
that a composition may be optimal or standard does not
criticize, discredit, or otherwise discourage investigation
into other compositions.”). Nothing the Board cites ade-
quately supports its holding that if engine designers sought
greater fuel efficiency or reliability, Wendus would discour-
age them from using a two-stage turbine or lead them away
from using a two-stage turbine. 5 Cf. In re Gurley, 27 F.3d
551, 553 (Fed. Cir. 1994) (“A known or obvious composition
does not become patentable simply because it has been
5 The goal of improved fuel efficiency is not set forth
in the ’920 patent; the patent notes no express purpose and
says nothing about the number of high-pressure turbine
stages outside the claims. The patent does, however, char-
acterize one of the deficiencies of the prior art as “in-
crease[d] fuel burn.” ’920 patent at 1:26–38.
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described as somewhat inferior to some other product for
the same use.”).
B
For similar reasons, the Board lacks substantial evi-
dence for its conclusion that GE did not establish a motiva-
tion to combine Wendus and Moxon.
An invention claimed in a patent would have been ob-
vious if “a person of ordinary skill in the art would have
had reason to attempt to make the composition or device,
or carry out the claimed process, and would have had a rea-
sonable expectation of success in doing so.” PharmaStem
Therapeutics, Inc. v. ViaCell, Inc., 491 F.3d 1342, 1360
(Fed. Cir. 2007). The Board made certain findings that, on
their own, could establish obviousness. It found that, at
the time of the invention, “high pressure turbine stage
count generally was a binary choice, such that there were
usually only two options.” Final Written Decision at *10.
It also found that, in making this binary choice,
a person of ordinary skill in the art at the time of
the ’920 patent’s invention would have known of
various tradeoffs involved in choosing between one
or two stages for the high pressure turbine of a two-
spool gas turbine engine. A one-stage turbine ad-
vantageously is axially shorter, and has fewer
parts, versus a two-stage turbine, thereby reducing
the weight of the engine and the cost of obtaining
parts. A two-stage turbine reduces the stress
placed on the turbine, and provides a higher effi-
ciency, versus a one-stage turbine, thereby improv-
ing the life, reliability, and fuel consumption of the
turbine.
Final Written Decision at *10 (citations omitted). It sum-
marized this design tradeoff by noting that the evidence as
a whole established both that “a two-stage high pressure
turbine had certain advantages over a one-stage high
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pressure turbine” and that “a one-stage high pressure tur-
bine had certain advantages over a two-stage high pressure
turbine.” Id. at *13. The Board also rejected Raytheon’s
argument that an artisan would not have a reasonable ex-
pectation of success combining Moxon’s disclosure of a two-
stage turbine with the rest of the engine features taught by
Wendus. See id. at *16. These findings set forth reasons
that an artisan might seek to modify Wendus by choosing
a two-stage high-pressure turbine instead of a one-stage
turbine—improved turbine life and reliability and better
engine fuel consumption—and a reasonable expectation of
success in doing so.
But the Board then held that “it makes little engineer-
ing sense for a person of ordinary skill in the art, when
seeking to improve upon or otherwise modify the Wendus
[advanced] engine, to go against Wendus’s strong prefer-
ence for a one-stage high pressure turbine, despite the
known advantages provided by a two-stage design.” Final
Written Decision at *13 (internal quotation marks and ci-
tations omitted). It again based this purported “strong
preference” on its faulty findings that Wendus described
“the one-stage turbine as a critical and enabling technology
providing significant advantages over a prior art engine
having a two-stage turbine,” and that “other [Wendus] en-
gine components [being] specifically designed to accommo-
date the [one-stage] turbine.” Id.
Having dispensed with the error of Wendus’s “strong
preference” in Part IV.A, supra, we need not explain again
why the Board’s conclusion is not supported by substantial
evidence. Final Written Decision at *10. And without Wen-
dus’s purported “strong preference” for a one-stage turbine,
the problem with the Board finding a lack of motivation to
combine unmistakably appears. An artisan seeking to im-
prove upon or otherwise modify the Wendus advanced en-
gine would have tried to implement a two-stage high-
pressure turbine because of the known advantages pro-
vided by a two-stage design. PAR, 773 F.3d at 1197–98
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(“Our precedent . . . does not require that the motivation be
the best option, only that it be a suitable option from which
the prior art did not teach away.”); In re Fulton, 391 F.3d
1195, 1200 (Fed. Cir. 2004) (holding that “a particular com-
bination” need not “be the preferred, or the most desirable,
combination described in the prior art in order to provide
motivation”).
Moreover, “any need or problem known in the field of
endeavor at the time of invention and addressed by the pa-
tent can provide a reason for combining the elements in the
manner claimed.” KSR Int’l Co. v. Teleflex Inc., 550 U.S.
398, 420 (2007). Even assuming the Board’s finding of
Wendus’s “strong preference” for a one-stage turbine was
supported by substantial evidence, the Board does not ad-
equately explain why an artisan more concerned with fuel
efficiency rather than engine weight or cost would have
credited this “strong preference” for a one-stage turbine
over the known fuel efficiency advantage that a two-stage
turbine offers. “[A] given course of action often has simul-
taneous advantages and disadvantages, and this does not
necessarily obviate motivation to combine.” Medichem, 437
F.3d at 1165.
The Board quoted DePuy Spine, 567 F.3d at 1326, that
“[a]n inference of nonobviousness is especially strong
where the prior art’s teachings undermine the very reason
being proffered as to why a person of ordinary skill would
have combined the known elements.” Final Written Deci-
sion at *12. But the Board made findings echoing the rea-
sons for combination that GE proffered—that an artisan
would have combined Wendus and Moxon because a two-
stage turbine “would have predictably yielded lower me-
chanical stresses and thereby lowered the risk of compo-
nent failure in the high pressure turbine, and would also
increase efficiency.” Id. at *8. And the Board makes no
findings that Wendus contradicts this conclusion. Unless
the Board can show how Wendus teaches that a two-stage
turbine would not lower mechanical stresses or improve
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fuel efficiency, adequately contradicting its own explicit,
supported findings that a two-stage turbine would do so,
the Board lacks substantial evidence for its conclusion that
GE did not establish a motivation to combine Wendus and
Moxon.
C
Finally, the Board lacked substantial evidence for hold-
ing that GE did not establish the obviousness of claim 10
“as a whole.” Final Written Decision at *14. The Board
faulted GE for not “provid[ing] a persuasive motivation or
justification for why a person of ordinary skill in the art,
when modifying the Wendus [advanced] engine to include
a two-stage high pressure turbine, would maintain the
other claimed parameters within the scope of claim 10.” Id.
at *15. In particular, the Board criticized GE for failing to
“provide a reason why a person of ordinary skill in the art
would maintain the low pressure turbine stage count be-
tween 3 and 6, and the low pressure turbine pressure ratio
greater than about 5, when incorporating a two-stage high
pressure turbine in the Wendus [advanced] engine.” Id.
at *16.
The Board’s decision misunderstands the requirement
to show obviousness of the claim as a whole. We have ex-
plained that the purpose of this requirement is to prevent
a patent challenger from merely showing that all elements
of the claim exist, without showing why an artisan might
combine the elements. See Princeton Biochemicals, Inc. v.
Beckman Coulter, Inc., 411 F.3d 1332, 1337 (Fed. Cir.
2005). But the law has always evaluated the motivation to
combine elements based on the combination of prior art ref-
erences that together disclose all of the elements of the in-
vention. Cf. Unigene Labs., Inc. v. Apotex, Inc., 655 F.3d
1352, 1361 (Fed. Cir. 2011) (“[T]he claimed invention is not
obvious if a person of ordinary skill would not select and
combine the prior art references to reach the claimed com-
position or formulation.” (emphasis added)). In contrast,
Case: 19-1319 Document: 74 Page: 31 Filed: 12/23/2020
GENERAL ELECTRIC COMPANY v. RAYTHEON TECHNOLOGIES 31
CORP.
the Board’s approach would require a motivation to com-
bine each element of the claim—even those present to-
gether in a reference. This analysis unduly dissects prior
art references into collections of individual elements, re-
quiring a party showing obviousness to re-do the work al-
ready done in the prior art reference. The claimed
invention and an invention in the prior art must both be
analyzed as a whole for the same reason: an invention is
more than the sum of its individual elements.
This does not change when combining prior art refer-
ences would require some alteration of the apparatuses dis-
closed in the prior art. The Board justified the need to show
motivation to combine each element of claim 10 with its
finding that “incorporating a two-stage high pressure tur-
bine within the Wendus [advanced] engine would likely
lead to changes to other components in the engine.” Final
Written Decision at *16. But “‘[a] person of ordinary skill
is also a person of ordinary creativity, not an automaton,’
so the fact that it would take some creativity to carry out
the combination does not defeat a finding of obviousness.”
Facebook, Inc. v. Windy City Innovations, LLC, 953 F.3d
1313, 1333 (Fed. Cir. 2020) (quoting KSR Int’l Co. v. Tele-
flex Inc., 550 U.S. 398, 421 (2007)).
We fail to accept the Board’s evidence that GE did not
establish motivation to combine Wendus and Moxon to
achieve the elements of claim 10 as a whole. Wendus meets
all the elements of claim 10 except for the two-stage high-
pressure turbine, which Moxon discloses. GE does not
merely identify each claim element as present in Wendus
and Moxon. Instead, GE’s obviousness theory combines
the elements disclosed in Wendus’s advanced engine with
Moxon’s teaching of a two-stage high-pressure turbine to
attain better turbine reliability and efficiency. And the
Board did not adopt Raytheon’s argument that GE did not
show a reasonable expectation of success in combining
Wendus and Moxon. Final Written Decision at *16.
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32 GENERAL ELECTRIC COMPANY v. RAYTHEON TECHNOLOGIES
CORP.
It does not matter that GE did not explain why an ar-
tisan would be motivated to use each element disclosed in
Wendus. That Wendus treats the claim parameters as de-
sirable is enough motivation for an artisan to combine
them with a two-stage turbine, as long as the artisan can
make the combination with a reasonable expectation of
success. For that reason, the Board’s finding that GE did
not show the obviousness of claim 10 “as a whole” lacks
substantial evidence.
V
We have considered the parties’ remaining arguments;
we find them unpersuasive. 6 Because the Board lacked
substantial evidence for its underlying factual conclusions
from which it found claims 10–14 of the ’920 patent non-
obvious, we vacate the Board’s decision and remand the
case to the Board for further proceedings consistent with
this opinion.
VACATED AND REMANDED
Costs to appellant.
6 We decline to reach GE’s legal arguments on estop-
pel because the Board found that claims 10–14 are patent-
ably distinct from claim 9. Final Written Decision at *4.
We leave it to the Board’s discretion on remand to deter-
mine whether our opinion changes its conclusion in this re-
spect. If the Board determines it proper to revisit its
conclusion, it should determine whether claims 10–14 “pre-
sent materially different issues that alter the question of
patentability, making them patentably distinct from”
claim 9. MaxLinear, Inc. v. CF CRESPE LLC, 880 F.3d
1373, 1378 (Fed. Cir. 2018).