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Bragg grating with asymmetric reflectance spectrum; Redfern Integrated Optics, Inc.; U.S. Pat. No. 8,121,449

U.S. Patent No. 8,121,449, issued on February 21, 2012 to Redfern Integrated Optics, Inc. (RIO) of Santa Clara, CA, discloses a planar photonic waveguide with a Bragg grating having an asymmetric reflectance spectrum.

The ’449 patent explains that a Bragg grating formed in a planar waveguide generally has a reflectance versus wavelength with a central peak at the Bragg wavelength and multiple side lobes with lower reflectances located on either side of the peak.  For some applications (e.g., filtering), these side lobes are desirably as small as possible, so that the Bragg grating reflects only light having the Bragg wavelength.  For other applications (e.g., external-cavity lasers), suppression of the side lobes on the longer-wavelength side of the peak are more important than those on the shorter-wavelength side.  The ’449 patent discloses a structure of the planar waveguide’s Bragg grating that has a cross-sectional dimension that varies symmetrically in both directions along the grating from a center of the grating such that the longer-wavelength side lobes are suppressed relative to the shorter-wavelength side lobes.

According to its website, RIO “develops and manufactures optical sources and subsystems based on its proprietary planar external cavity laser technology.”  RIO’s PLANEX™ series of narrow linewidth single frequency external cavity laser diodes is described as consisting of “a gain chip and a planar lightwave circuit (PLC) that includes a Bragg grating.”  There’s no indication on its website whether RIO’s products utilize the type of Bragg grating described in the ’449 patent.

The ’449 patent almost was never issued because of a missed deadline.  The USPTO mailed an office action to RIO’s representative in April 2008 in which most of the claims were rejected, but some claims were deemed to include allowable subject matter.  Applicants are given a maximum of six months to respond to such office actions, however, RIO never filed a response within this time period, so the application was deemed abandoned by the USPTO.  Nearly three years to the day after the office action was mailed, in April 2011, RIO filed its response to the office action, along with a petition and fee to the USPTO to revive the patent application on the basis that the entire delay in responding was unintentional.  The petition was granted soon afterwards, and the ’449 patent eventually issued. 

Under its rules, the USPTO does not require evidence be submitted in support of the statement that the entire delay was unintentional.  The USPTO can request additional information if there is a question that the entire delay was unintentional, but basically, the USPTO merely checks to see that the required forms and fees have been submitted.  However, even when the petition is granted and the patent is issued, there can be a black mark on the patent that can give a competitor an opening to get away with infringement.

For example, if RIO ever sues an accused infringer of the ’449 patent, the accused infringer will likely challenge the validity of the ’449 patent on the basis that RIO’s entire delay in responding actually was not unintentional (e.g., by proving that RIO knew of the abandonment for a period of time before preparing and filing the petition to revive).  If the accused infringer is successful, the patent would be deemed invalid, so there would be no infringement.  Thus, by being abandoned and then revived, the ’449 patent has a shadow on it that could affect its ability to exclude others from making, using, and selling the claimed invention. 

 

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VCSEL with improved high-frequency performance; NeoPhotonics Corp.; U.S. Pat. No. 7,903,712

U.S. Patent No. 7,903,712, issued on March 8, 2011 to NeoPhotonics Corp. of San Jose, CA, discloses a VCSEL structure having a reduced capacitance and improved high-frequency performance.

 

A vertical cavity surface emitting laser (VCSEL) is a semiconductor laser diode having a stacked quantum well structure between two reflectors that emits laser light perpendicularly to the stack with a resonant wavelength.  To allow the resonant wavelength to be tunable, one of the reflectors can be placed on a cantilever arm that is deflected electrostatically to vary the spacing between the reflectors, and hence adjust the resonant wavelength.

According to the ’712 patent, various properties (e.g., the single mode, surface mode, and compact size) of VCSELs make them desirable for use in fiber optic telecommunication systems.  However, parasitic capacitance can degrade the output power of such VCSELs, and existing methods of reducing the capacitance using deep proton implantation to create electrically isolating regions have several drawbacks (e.g., damage that cannot be annealed away, damage to the cantilever, increased processing times).  The ’712 patent discloses an etch process to create voids that physically and electrically isolate the device active area, thereby reducing parasitic capacitance, without proton implantation.

According to its website, NeoPhotonics is “a leading designer and manufacturer of photonic integrated circuit, or PIC, based modules and subsystems for bandwidth-intensive, high-speed communications networks.”  The company raised about $83 million through its initial public offering on February 2, 2011 with a starting price of $11.00/share.  The share price quickly reached a high of about $21/share, but is currently priced between $8-10/share. 

Reviewing the file history of the ’712 patent, it apparently began as a patent application filed by Bandwidth9, Inc. in September 2004 after the company filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in August 2004.  NeoPhotonics eventually purchased the patent application that resulted in the ’712 patent from Bandwidth9.  However, during the transfer from Bandwidth9 to NeoPhotonics, a reply to a pending USPTO notice was not filed, so the patent application went abandoned.  The error was not discovered by NeoPhotonics for about two years, upon which the company filed a petition for revival of the application on the grounds that the delay in replying to the USPTO notice was unintentional. 

Such revivals of abandoned patent applications are permissible under U.S. law, as long as that the entire delay in filing the required reply was unintentional.  Generally, all that is required is a statement by the applicant that the entire delay was unintentional, but in cases where the USPTO questions whether the entire delay was unintentional, the USPTO can require further detailed information regarding how the delay came to be, as was done for this application.  After examining the additional information provided by NeoPhotonics, the USPTO granted the petition for revival.

Partially due to this unintentional delay, the ’712 patent issued with an additional 1913 days of patent term (the time that the patent may be asserted against accused infringers).  The standard term of a U.S. patent is 20 years from the filing date of the patent application, however, in certain circumstances, additional time may be granted, e.g., to make up for delays in the USPTO’s handling of the patent application.  As a result, instead of expiring in September 2024, the full patent term of the ’712 patent will not expire until about December 2029.

According to the USPTO database, NeoPhotonics received three U.S. patents in 2010 and seven in 2009.  The ’712 patent is the first U.S. patent obtained by NeoPhotonics in 2011, with a second one (U.S. Pat. No. 7,905,114 regarding a method of forming optical fiber preforms) having been issued on March 15, 2011. 

 
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Posted by on March 24, 2011 in laser, semiconductor, VCSEL

 

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