throbber

`
`
`
`UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE
`
`_____________________________
`
`
`BEFORE THE PATENT TRIAL AND APPEAL BOARD
`
`_____________________________
`
`
`COOLIT SYSTEMS, INC.,
`
`Petitioner,
`
`v.
`
`ASETEK DANMARK A/S,
`
`Patent Owner.
`_____________________________
`
`IPR2021-01196
`U.S. Patent 10,599,196
`_____________________________
`
`
`DECLARATION OF DAVID TUCKERMAN, PH.D., IN SUPPORT OF
`PATENT OWNER’S PRELIMINARY RESPONSE
`
`
`
`
`
`

`

`I.
`II.
`
`TABLE OF CONTENTS
`
`QUALIFICATION AND EXPERIENCE ....................................................... 2
`LEGAL STANDARDS ................................................................................... 5
`A.
`Claim Construction................................................................................ 5
`B. Anticipation ........................................................................................... 6
`C. Obviousness ........................................................................................... 6
`III. DEFINITION OF A PERSON OF ORDINARY SKILL IN THE ART ........ 9
`IV. THE ’355 PATENT .......................................................................................10
`V.
`THE DUAN REFERENCE ...........................................................................14
`VI. CLAIM CONSTRUCTION ..........................................................................16
`VII. DUAN DOES NOT DISCLOSE ALL LIMITATIONS OF CLAIM 1 ........19
`
`
`
`
`
`
`
`
`
`
`
`
`
`
`
`
`
`
`
`
`
`
`
`i
`
`

`

`IPR2021-01196
`U.S. Patent No 10,599,196
`Declaration of D. Tuckerman
`
`
`I, David B. Tuckerman, declare as follows:
`
`
`1. I have been retained by Finnegan, Henderson, Farabow, Garrett & Dunner
`
`LLP (“Finnegan”) on behalf of Asetek Danmark A/S (“Asetek”) as an expert
`
`in the field of liquid cooling of computers and servers. This Declaration is in
`
`support of the Inter Partes Review of U.S. Patent No. 10,599,196 to André
`
`Eriksen (“the ’196 patent”).
`
`2. I am being compensated at the rate of $475.00 per hour for my work on this
`
`matter. My compensation in no way depends on the outcome of this
`
`proceeding, the content of my testimony, or any issues involved in or related
`
`to this proceeding. In preparing this Declaration, I reviewed and considered
`
`the ’196 patent, the prosecution history of the ’196 patent, the Petition, Dr.
`
`Pokharna’s declaration, and the Duan prior art reference that I discuss in this
`
`Declaration. In addition to these materials, I may consider additional
`
`documents and information in forming any supplemental opinions. To the
`
`extent I am provided additional documents or information, including any
`
`additional expert declarations filed by Petitioner in this proceeding, I may
`
`offer further opinions.
`
`3. Based on my experience, knowledge of the art at the relevant time, analysis
`
`of prior art references, and the understanding a person of ordinary skill in the
`
`1
`
`

`

`IPR2021-01196
`U.S. Patent No 10,599,196
`Declaration of D. Tuckerman
`
`art would have of the claim terms in light of the specification, it is my opinion
`
`that claims 1 and 2 of the ’196 patent are not unpatentable based on the prior
`
`art references discussed below.
`
`I.
`
`QUALIFICATION AND EXPERIENCE
`4. I have B.S. degrees in Electrical Engineering and Physics, and M.S. in
`
`Electrical Engineering and Computer Science from Massachusetts Institute of
`
`Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts. I also have a Ph.D. in Electrical
`
`Engineering and a M.B.A. from Stanford University, Stanford, CA. My Ph.D.
`
`thesis, titled “Heat-Transfer Microstructures for Integrated Circuits,” focused
`
`on developing new, high-performance liquid-cooled heat sinks for thermal
`
`management of high-speed integrated circuits, and received the Fannie and
`
`John Hertz Foundation Hertz Thesis Prize. The key results in my Ph.D. thesis
`
`were published in the peer-reviewed journal IEEE Electron Device Letters
`
`with the title “High-Performance Heat Sinking for VLSI”, and this publication
`
`has so far received over 5000 citations in the professional literature, as
`
`reported by Google Scholar. This paper was selected by the IEEE Electron
`
`Devices Society to receive the first “Paul Rappaport Award”, although this
`
`new award series did not get officially approved by IEEE until 1983.
`
`2
`
`

`

`IPR2021-01196
`U.S. Patent No 10,599,196
`Declaration of D. Tuckerman
`
`5. I am an experienced innovator and inventor with over 120 issued U.S. patents,
`
`many foreign patents, and numerous pending applications, spanning the fields
`
`of thermal management systems, heat transfer, electronic packaging and
`
`interconnect technologies, and superconducting devices and circuits, etc.
`
`6. I was a member of the Josephson junction computer project (superconducting
`
`logic circuit design, simulation, and testing) while attending M.I.T., and
`
`worked as a project leader at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
`
`(LLNL), supervising and managing advanced R&D programs in various fields
`
`including electronic packaging and interconnect. My PhD thesis work on
`
`microchannel was applied by researchers at LLNL to cool high-power laser
`
`diodes; this work was published in the peer-reviewed journal Applied Physics
`
`Letters.
`
`7. I founded nCHIP, Inc. in 1989, focusing on advanced multi-chip module
`
`technologies enabling ultracompact high-performance digital systems, which
`
`was later sold to Flextronics International Ltd. in 1995.
`
`8. I am an experienced entrepreneur, venture capitalist, and executive leader
`
`with over 20 years of experience founding, growing and leading technology
`
`companies. While working as a senior VP and CTO of Tessera Inc., I helped
`
`3
`
`

`

`IPR2021-01196
`U.S. Patent No 10,599,196
`Declaration of D. Tuckerman
`
`Tessera grow via various acquisitions, one of which led to the development
`
`of a new technology for silent air cooling of laptop computers.
`
`9. I was elected by the IEEE to the grade of “IEEE Fellow”, which is the highest
`
`membership grade, and for which selection is limited to less than 0.1% of the
`
`IEEE membership each year. I was specifically cited “for contributions to
`
`high-performance electronic packaging and interconnection technologies,
`
`including the development of the microchannel heat sink.”
`
`10. I was keynote speaker at the 9th International Conference on Nanochannels,
`
`Microchannels, and Minichannels (ICNMM), invited because of my
`
`pioneering work in the field of microchannel cooling. I was also co-author of
`
`a review article on Heat Transfer in Microchannels in the peer-reviewed
`
`Journal of Heat Transfer.
`
`11. I am a licensed Professional Engineer in California.
`
`12. I am currently an independent consultant through my own company
`
`Tuckerman & Associates, Inc., working on various technical and intellectual
`
`property matters in the high-tech industries. Some of my major clients have
`
`included CMEA Capital, Tessera, Intellectual Ventures, and Microsoft. I have
`
`consulted for Microsoft’s Quantum Computing and “Cold Logic” programs
`
`for 9 years (2011-2020), including management of a 6-year research contract
`
`4
`
`

`

`IPR2021-01196
`U.S. Patent No 10,599,196
`Declaration of D. Tuckerman
`
`with Auburn University to develop high-density flexible thin-film cryogenic
`
`interconnect having optimal heat-transfer properties (i.e., minimal heat
`
`leakage between temperature stages) while maintaining excellent electrical
`
`performance. I was also a consultant for the first phase of Microsoft’s “Project
`
`Natick” (which implemented a demonstrative underwater datacenter off the
`
`southern California coast in 2015), including the design of the heat exchanger
`
`structures and the subsequent analysis of its actual undersea performance.
`
`13. Attached as Exhibit A to this Declaration is a copy of my CV, which provides
`
`a detailed listing of my publications and patents, as well as my education and
`
`experience.
`
`II. LEGAL STANDARDS
`A. Claim Construction
`14. I have been informed by counsel and I understand that the first step in
`
`determining the patentability of a patent claim is for the claim terms to be
`
`properly construed. I understand that in the related district court litigation
`
`involving the ’196 patent, certain claim terms have been construed. I agree
`
`with those claim constructions. All other terms should be given their plain and
`
`ordinary meaning as understood by those skilled in the art.
`
`5
`
`

`

`IPR2021-01196
`U.S. Patent No 10,599,196
`Declaration of D. Tuckerman
`
`
`B. Anticipation
`15. I am not an attorney and have not been asked to offer my opinion on the law.
`
`However, as an expert offering an opinion on whether the claims of the ’196
`
`patent are unpatentable, I have been told that I am obliged to follow existing
`
`law.
`
`16. I have been told the following legal principles apply to an analysis of
`
`patentability pursuant to 35 U.S.C. § 102, a provision in the patent law
`
`regarding anticipation. I have been told that, in an inter partes review
`
`proceeding, patent claims may be deemed unpatentable if it is shown by
`
`preponderance of the evidence that the claims were anticipated by prior art
`
`patents or printed publications.
`
`17. I have been told that for a claim to be anticipated under § 102, every limitation
`
`of the claimed invention must be disclosed by a single prior art reference,
`
`viewed from the perspective of a person of ordinary skill in the art.
`
`C. Obviousness
`18. I have been told that under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a), “[a] patent may not be obtained
`
`although the invention is not identically disclosed or described as set forth in
`
`section 102, if the differences between the subject matter sought to be patented
`
`and the prior art are such that the subject matter would have been obvious at
`
`6
`
`

`

`IPR2021-01196
`U.S. Patent No 10,599,196
`Declaration of D. Tuckerman
`
`the time the invention was made to a person having ordinary skill in the art to
`
`which said subject matter pertains.”
`
`19. When considering the issues of obviousness, I have been told that I am to do
`
`the following:
`
`a. Determine the scope and content of the prior art;
`
`b. Ascertain the differences between the prior art and the claims at issue;
`
`c. Resolve the level of ordinary skill in the pertinent art; and
`
`d. Consider evidence of secondary indicia of non-obviousness (if
`
`available).
`
`20. I have been told that the relevant time for considering whether a claim would
`
`have been obvious to a person of ordinary skill in the art is the time of alleged
`
`invention, which I have assumed is shortly before the effective filing date of
`
`the application leading to the ’196 patent.
`
`21. I have been told that any assertion of secondary indicia of non-obviousness
`
`must be accompanied by a nexus between the merits of the invention and the
`
`evidence offered.
`
`22. I have been told that a reference may be combined with other references to
`
`disclose each element of the invention under § 103. I have been told that a
`
`reference may also be combined with the knowledge of a person of ordinary
`
`7
`
`

`

`IPR2021-01196
`U.S. Patent No 10,599,196
`Declaration of D. Tuckerman
`
`skill in the art and that this knowledge may be used to combine multiple
`
`references. I have also been told that a person of ordinary skill in the art is
`
`presumed to know the relevant prior art. I have been told that the obviousness
`
`analysis may account for the inferences and creative steps that a person of
`
`ordinary skill in the art would employ.
`
`23. I have been told that whether a prior art reference renders a patent claim
`
`unpatentable as obvious is determined from the perspective of a person of
`
`ordinary skill in the art. I have been told that there is no requirement that the
`
`prior art contain an express teaching or suggestion to combine known
`
`elements to achieve the claimed invention, but that a motivation or rationale
`
`for combining prior art elements in a way that realizes the claimed invention
`
`is required to show obviousness, and that it seeks to counter impermissible
`
`hindsight analysis.
`
`24. I have been told that when a work is available in one field, design alternatives
`
`and other market forces can prompt variations of it, either in the same field or
`
`in another. I have been told that if a person of ordinary skill in the art can
`
`implement a predictable variation and would see the benefit of doing so, that
`
`variation is likely to be obvious. I have been told that, when there is a design
`
`need or market pressure and there are a finite number of predictable solutions,
`
`8
`
`

`

`IPR2021-01196
`U.S. Patent No 10,599,196
`Declaration of D. Tuckerman
`
`a person of ordinary skill in the art has good reason to pursue those known
`
`options that realizes the claimed invention. In addition, I have been informed
`
`and I understand that there must be a reasonable expectation of success—not
`
`absolute predictability of success—in combining prior art teachings to arrive
`
`at the claimed invention.
`
`III. DEFINITION OF A PERSON OF ORDINARY SKILL IN THE ART
`25. The ’196 patent has an effective filing date of May 6, 2005. A person having
`
`ordinary skill in the field of liquid cooling systems at that time (i.e., in May
`
`2005) would have
`
`(i) completed college
`
`level course work
`
`in
`
`thermodynamics, fluid mechanics, and heat transfer, and (ii) attained two or
`
`more years of experience in designing liquid cooling systems for computers,
`
`servers, or other electronic devices, or very similar technology. Alternatively,
`
`a person with a more advanced degree in the above fields may have had less
`
`practical experience and be a person of ordinary skill in the art.
`
`26. I believe that I have the relevant experience and understanding of one of
`
`ordinary skill in this field.
`
`27. The claims of the ’196 patent are not unpatentable under either Petitioner’s
`
`definition of a “POSITA” (Pet., 9), or my definition given above.
`
`
`
`9
`
`

`

`IPR2021-01196
`U.S. Patent No 10,599,196
`Declaration of D. Tuckerman
`
`
`IV. THE ’355 PATENT
`28. Computers (and particularly their central processing units, or “CPUs”)
`
`generate heat during operation, and as CPU performance increases, so does
`
`heat generation. The performance of a computer CPU chip is proportional to
`
`the density of the circuits and the clock speed. The greater the circuit density
`
`and clock speed, the greater the performance of the CPU. As CPU
`
`performance increases, so does the amount of heat generated by the CPU, and
`
`also the need for efficient and effective dissipation of the heat generated by
`
`the CPU. This is true for both personal computers (desktops, laptops,
`
`netbooks, etc.) and computer servers/data centers.
`
`29. There are various air cooling and liquid cooling methods to manage heat in a
`
`computer system. While air cooling systems are cheaper and easier to install,
`
`air cooling has a fundamental limit in heat density, and this limit is surpassed
`
`in many high-end applications, often necessitating a shift towards liquid
`
`cooling systems. Liquid cooling systems are more efficient at heat removal
`
`than air cooling systems. Prior art liquid cooling systems, however, were
`
`bulky and posed significant risk of leakage because they comprised several
`
`separate components (such as a heat exchanger, a liquid reservoir, a pump,
`
`10
`
`

`

`IPR2021-01196
`U.S. Patent No 10,599,196
`Declaration of D. Tuckerman
`
`and a heat radiator) coupled together using tubes, as shown in Prior Art Figure
`
`3 of the Asetek patents (depicted below).
`
`
`
`30. The ’196 patent discloses many technological advances in the art of computer
`
`liquid cooling. Among other things, Asetek’s patented technology disclosed
`
`in the ’196 patent is a significant advancement from the modular approach of
`
`the prior art liquid cooling devices. Figures 17 and 20 of the ’196 patent
`
`represent embodiments of the claimed invention. As evident from the patent
`
`claims and the figures, Asetek’s claimed invention has, among other features,
`
`a pump unit that combines a pump, a dual-chambered “reservoir,” and a “heat-
`
`exchanging interface” (i.e., a cold plate) into a single component. The
`
`reservoir in Asetek’s patented design is divided into two chambers, referred
`
`11
`
`

`

`IPR2021-01196
`U.S. Patent No 10,599,196
`Declaration of D. Tuckerman
`
`to as the “pump chamber” and “thermal exchange chamber,” as shown in
`
`Figure 20 (annotated below). The chambers are vertically spaced apart and are
`
`fluidly coupled together to allow for heat dissipation from the CPU via the
`
`“heat exchanging interface,” which forms the boundary wall of the thermal
`
`exchange chamber, and which is placed in thermal contact with the CPU. This
`
`novel and innovative configuration, among other features of the patented
`
`inventions, enables separate and independent optimization of the pumping
`
`function in the pump chamber and the heat transfer function in the thermal
`
`exchange chamber.
`
`
`
`
`
`12
`
`

`

`IPR2021-01196
`U.S. Patent No 10,599,196
`Declaration of D. Tuckerman
`
`31. In exemplary embodiments disclosed and claimed in the ’196 patent, the
`
`pump chamber is defined by a double-sided chassis and an impeller cover. For
`
`example, in the preferred embodiment shown in Figures 17 and 20, pump
`
`chamber 46 is defined by a double-sided chassis on the top and impeller cover
`
`46A on the bottom. See ’196 patent, 23:1-29. Cooling liquid enters pump
`
`chamber 46 through an inlet in impeller cover 46A, the inlet being positioned
`
`below the rotational center of an impeller 33 housed in the pump chamber.
`
`See id. at 23:1-29, Figs. 17 and 20. Cooling liquid exits pump chamber 46
`
`through an outlet 34 provided in impeller cover 46A, the outlet being
`
`positioned tangentially to the circumference of impeller 33. Id. Thermal
`
`exchange chamber 47A is defined between pump chamber 46 and heat
`
`exchange interface 4. See id. at Figs. 17 and 20.
`
`32. In addition to improved efficiency and compactness, Asetek’s patented
`
`designs have greatly reduced and/or eliminated the risk of coolant leakage and
`
`have enabled pre-filled (factory assembled) liquid cooling products that are
`
`easy to install by users. The novel and innovative concepts disclosed in the
`
`’196 patent have also made manufacturing of liquid cooling products simpler
`
`and less costly.
`
`13
`
`

`

`IPR2021-01196
`U.S. Patent No 10,599,196
`Declaration of D. Tuckerman
`
`
`V. THE DUAN REFERENCE
`33. The only ground applicable to claims 1 and 2 is Ground 1 (obviousness based
`
`on Duan). Accordingly, Duan (Ex. 1004) is the only reference I have
`
`discussed in this Declaration.
`
`34. Duan discloses a “cooling plate module” for cooling a central processing unit
`
`(CPU). Ex. 1004, ¶[0002]. Duan’s “cooling plate module” includes a “cooling
`
`plate [] integrally formed with [a] liquid driving module such that the layout
`
`of the cooling plate module can be minimized to reduce space.” Id. at ¶[0007].
`
`The “liquid driving module” includes an “accommodation chamber” and a
`
`“liquid driving unit.” Id. at ¶[0009]. The “liquid driving unit” drives the
`
`coolant through a cooling loop comprising the “cooling plate module” and a
`
`“water tank module” that cools heated coolant. Id. at ¶¶[0009], [0010].
`
`35. Figure 6, annotated below, shows Duan’s cooling plate module 10 in
`
`communication with water tank module 20 through ducts. Id. at ¶[0022].
`
`Cooling plate module 10 includes a cooling plate 1 and a liquid driving
`
`module 2, which comprises an accommodation chamber 21 and a liquid
`
`driving unit 22 located in accommodation chamber 21 and configured to drive
`
`the coolant (accommodation chamber 21 and liquid driving unit 22 are not
`
`annotated in the figure below but are included in liquid driving module 2). Id.
`
`14
`
`

`

`IPR2021-01196
`U.S. Patent No 10,599,196
`Declaration of D. Tuckerman
`
`at ¶¶[0022], [0023]. The coolant collects heat from CPU 200 at cooling plate
`
`1, which has a heat absorbing face 11 in thermal contact with the CPU. Ex.
`
`1004, Fig. 6 (annotated below), ¶[0022]. The heated coolant flows to water
`
`tank module 20 where the coolant is cooled, and the cooled coolant flows back
`
`to the liquid driving module 2 and then to cooling plate 1. Id. at Fig. 6,
`
`¶¶[0022], [0027], [0028].
`
`36. Cooling plate 1 is assembled with a cap 3 to define a closed space therein
`
`(the alleged “thermal exchange chamber”). Id. at ¶[0023], Fig. 7 (not shown);
`
`
`
`15
`
`

`

`IPR2021-01196
`U.S. Patent No 10,599,196
`Declaration of D. Tuckerman
`
`Ex. 1003, ¶61. Heat-dissipating plates 12 are located in the cap. Ex. 1004,
`
`¶[0024]. Liquid driving unit 22 (included in accommodation chamber 21 of
`
`liquid module 2) has a lower cover 225, which includes a liquid inlet 23
`
`through which cooled coolant from the water tank module 20 enters
`
`accommodation chamber 21 and is driven by liquid driving unit 22. Ex. 1005,
`
`¶¶[0023], [0027]. According to Dr. Pokharna, lower cover 225 and
`
`accommodation chamber 21 together form the claimed “pump chamber.” Ex.
`
`1003, ¶¶55, 57. Coolant in accommodation chamber 21 flows to cap 3
`
`through first liquid outlet 24. Ex. 1004, Fig. 8, ¶[0027]. The coolant collects
`
`heat from heat-dissipating plates 12 in cap 3. Id. at ¶[0027]. Cap 3 includes a
`
`second liquid outlet 31 through which heated coolant exits and flows to water
`
`tank module 20. Id. at Figs. 6 and 8, ¶[0023].
`
`37. According to Petitioner’s expert, Dr. Pokharna, the combination of
`
`accommodation chamber 21, lower cover 225, cap 3, and cooling plate 1
`
`forms the claimed “reservoir.” Ex. 1003, ¶¶51-53.
`
`VI. CLAIM CONSTRUCTION
`In my opinion, only the limitation “a first passage fluidly coupling the pump
`38.
`
`chamber and the thermal exchange chamber, wherein the first passage is
`
`configured to direct the cooling liquid from the outlet of the pump chamber
`
`16
`
`

`

`IPR2021-01196
`U.S. Patent No 10,599,196
`Declaration of D. Tuckerman
`
`into the thermal exchange chamber between a first end and a second end of
`
`the thermal exchanger chamber” of claim 1 requires review and determination
`
`by the Board because Petitioner is misinterpreting the meaning of this claim
`
`limitation and applying it to Duan incorrectly.
`
`39. To a person skilled in the art, this limitation in claim 1 of the ’196 patent
`
`would mean that the first passage, which fluidly couples the pump chamber
`
`and the thermal exchange chamber, is so configured that cooling liquid enters
`
`the thermal exchange chamber at a location between a first end and a second
`
`end of the thermal exchange chamber.
`
`40. This interpretation is fully support by the specification of the ’196 patent. The
`
`preferred embodiment shown in Figure 17 (annotated below) shows that the
`
`“first passage 48 for leading cooling liquid from the pump chamber 46 to a
`
`thermal exchange chamber 47A” is provided between a first end and a second
`
`of thermal exchange chamber 47A. See generally ’196 patent, 23:1-29. In
`
`contrast, the “second passage 49 for leading cooling liquid from the thermal
`
`exchange chamber 47A” is provided at the end of the thermal exchange
`
`chamber (as recited in claim 2).
`
`17
`
`

`

`IPR2021-01196
`U.S. Patent No 10,599,196
`Declaration of D. Tuckerman
`
`
`
`
`41.
`
`I disagree with Dr. Pokharna that “[t]here is no claim language that directly
`
`provides the location of the first passage itself” and that the first passage must
`
`only be “configured to direct the cooling liquid between two ends of the
`
`thermal exchange chamber.” Ex. 1003, ¶46 (emphasis in original). Dr.
`
`Pokharna’s interpretation disregards the term “into” in the claim limitation.
`
`Specifically, this claim limitation specifies that cooling liquid is directed “into
`
`the thermal exchange chamber between a first end and a second end of the
`
`thermal exchanger chamber,” thus providing a location where the first passage
`
`18
`
`

`

`IPR2021-01196
`U.S. Patent No 10,599,196
`Declaration of D. Tuckerman
`
`connects with the thermal exchange chamber. Dr. Pokharna’s interpretation
`
`that this limitation means cooling liquid is directed “between two ends of the
`
`thermal exchange chamber” (see id.) disregards the positional requirement of
`
`the first passage relative to the thermal exchange chamber that is imposed by
`
`the word “into” in the claim limitation.
`
`42.
`
`If Dr. Pokharna’s interpretation is accepted, then the preferred embodiment
`
`shown in Figure 17 (annotated above) will be excluded from the claim scope
`
`because in the embodiment shown in Figure 17, cooling liquid is not directed
`
`from one end of the thermal exchange chamber to the other end, rather cooling
`
`liquid is directed into the thermal exchange chamber at a location between the
`
`first and second ends and cooling liquid then spreads outwardly from that
`
`entry location towards the ends of the thermal exchange chamber.
`
`VII. DUAN DOES NOT DISCLOSE ALL LIMITATIONS OF CLAIM 1
`43. Duan does not disclose the limitation “a first passage fluidly coupling the
`
`pump chamber and the thermal exchange chamber, wherein the first passage
`
`is configured to direct the cooling liquid from the outlet of the pump chamber
`
`into the thermal exchange chamber between a first end and a second end of
`
`the thermal exchanger chamber” of claim 1. This is because Duan does not
`
`disclose cooling liquid entering into the thermal exchange chamber “between”
`
`19
`
`

`

`IPR2021-01196
`U.S. Patent No 10,599,196
`Declaration of D. Tuckerman
`
`the ends of the thermal exchange chamber. Instead, as shown in Figures 6 and
`
`8 of Duan, the Duan device has end-to-end flow in the alleged thermal
`
`exchange chamber, which requires cooling liquid to enter at one end of the
`
`thermal exchange chamber and exit at the opposite end.
`
`44. Specifically, Dr. Pokharna maps the “first passage” to first liquid outlet 24 of
`
`Duan. Ex. 1003, ¶70. But as his own annotations (on page 63 of his
`
`Declaration) show, outlet 24 is located at the first end of Duan’s alleged
`
`thermal exchange chamber; outlet 24 is not located between the first and
`
`second ends of the alleged thermal exchange chamber. Therefore, outlet 24 is
`
`not configured to direct cooling liquid “into the thermal exchange chamber
`
`between a first end and a second end of the thermal exchanger chamber” as
`
`required by claim 1. Therefore, this limitation of claim 1 is not disclosed or
`
`suggested by Duan. Accordingly, claim 1 is not rendered obvious by Duan.
`
`45.
`
`If Dr. Pokharna or CoolIT argues that outlet 24 is located between the ends of
`
`Duan’s alleged thermal exchange chamber, then by that same logic, second
`
`liquid outlet 31 (which Dr. Pokharna maps to the “second passage” of claim
`
`2) cannot be at the end of the thermal exchange chamber and would instead
`
`be positioned in between the two ends. See Ex. 1003, pp. 65, 67. That is, Duan
`
`20
`
`

`

`IPR2021-01196
`U.S. Patent No 10,599,196
`Declaration of D. Tuckerman
`
`cannot simultaneously satisfy both the last limitation of claim 1 and the
`
`limitation in claim 2.
`
`46.
`
`I declare under penalty of perjury under the laws of the United States of
`
`America that the foregoing is true and correct, that all statements made herein
`
`of my knowledge are true, and that all statements made on information and
`
`belief are believed to be true, and that these statements were made with the
`
`knowledge that willful false statements and the like so made are punishable
`
`by fine or imprisonment, or both, under Section 1001 of Title 18 of the United
`
` Respectfully submitted,
`
`By:__________ ______ ___
`
` David B. Tuckerman, Ph.D.
`
`States Code.
`
`Dated: September 30, 2021
`
`
`
`
`
`
`
`
`
`
`
`
`
`
`
`
`
`
`
`
`
`
`
`
`
`
`
`21
`
`

`

`EXHIBIT A
`EXHIBIT A
`
`Asetek Exhibit 2013 - Page 24 of 36
`CoolIT v. Asetek - IPR2021-01196
`
`

`

`David B. Tuckerman
`3 Wellesley Ct
`Lafayette CA 94549
`Cell: 415-298-4040
`d.tuckerman@comcast.net
`
`
`EXPERIENCE:
`
`Tuckerman & Associates, Inc., 2009-present: Independent consultant on a variety of
`technical and IP matters in high-tech industries. Major clients have included CMEA
`Capital, Tessera, Intellectual Ventures, and Microsoft. Consultant to Microsoft’s
`quantum computing program from 2011 through 2020, including management of a 6-year
`research contract with Auburn University to develop high-density flexible thin-film
`superconducting interconnect for quantum computing applications.
`
`Tessera Inc., 2003-2009: Senior Vice President and Chief Technical Officer. Member
`of the executive team that executed a successful IPO in November 2003, with a market
`capitalization that later exceeded $1 billion. Responsible for managing R&D activities
`and generating intellectual property in electronic packaging and related technologies, and
`for formulating a strategy for growth by acquisition. Identified numerous targets that
`were successfully acquired (North, Shellcase, Digital Optics, Eyesquad, Viewmagic,
`DBlur, Kronos); these acquisitions established Tessera in two new lines of business:
`“Imaging and Optics” (ultraminiature camera modules incorporating extended-depth-of-
`field wafer-scale optics; this ‘OptiML WLC’ technology was winner of an R&D 100
`Award) and “Silent Air Cooling” (fanless, electrostatically driven air cooling, enabling
`quiet ultra-thin laptop computers).
`
`CMEA Capital, 1997 – 2013: Venture Partner at a venture capital firm that has over $1
`billion under management. Responsible for sourcing and screening deals, performing
`due diligence, facilitating syndication, and making ongoing strategic and operational
`contributions to portfolio companies (including participating in Board meetings), for all
`deals having to do with physical technologies (electronics, optics, materials, energy, etc.).
`Primarily investing in technologies related to energy and advanced materials since 2008.
`Currently on Board of Directors of Reel Solar (electroplated CdTe photovoltaic
`technology).
`
`nCHIP, Inc., 1989-1997: Founder, Sr. VP, and Chief Technical Officer. Developed
`advanced multi-chip module technologies enabling ultracompact high-performance
`digital systems. Responsible for all technical development activities prior to transfer to
`manufacturing. nCHIP was financed by venture capital from three top-tier venture funds:
`Kleiner Perkins, Mohr Davidow, and Mayfield. nCHIP grew to approximately $12
`million in annualized revenues, and was sold to Flextronics International Ltd. in 1995
`for $38 million. Venture investors who held their Flextronics stock received up to 40x
`their initial investment.
`
`
`

`

`Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, 1983-1989: Project Leader, Physics
`Department. Managed advanced R&D programs in laser processing, electronic
`packaging and interconnect, X-ray optics, and other national-defense related programs.
`
`IBM T. J. Watson Research Center, 1977-1980 (MIT Co-op program): Member of the
`Josephson junction computer project (superconducting logic circuit design, simulation,
`and testing). Designed and demonstrated ultrahigh-performance sampling circuitry for
`on-chip diagnostics of superconducting logic.
`
`Consultant to numerous high-technology start-ups over the past 25 years. Previously on
`Board of Directors of Eneco Inc. (thermoelectric technology).
`
`EDUCATION:
`
`M.I.T, B.S. Electrical Engineering, 1980.
`M.I.T., B.S. Physics, 1980.
`M.I.T., M.S. Electrical Engineering & Computer Science, 1980.
`Stanford, Ph.D. Electrical Engineering, 1984.
`Stanford, MBA, 1998.
`
`PUBLICATIONS:
`
`See attached list. 5000+ citations in the professional literature (per Google Scholar)
`
`PATENTS:
`
`120+ issued U.S. patents, plus various foreign patents and numerous pending
`applications.
`
`MAJOR HONORS:
`
`
`Fellow of the IEEE
`IEEE Paul Rappaport Award
`Fannie and John Hertz Foundation Outstanding Ph.D. Thesis
`Consulting Associate Professor of E.E., Stanford University (late 1980’s/early 1990’s)
`
`(co-supervised two PhD theses on ‘laser planarization’)
`Best Paper Award, VLSI Multilevel Interconnection Conference, 1989
`Technical Program Chair, IEEE Multichip Module Conference, 1995
`General Chair, IEEE Multichip Module Conference, 1996
`Plenary speaker, ASME 9th International Conference on Nanochannels, Microchannels,
`and Minichannels, 2011.
`
`
`
`
`

`

`Selected Publications
`
`
`• Tuckerman, D. B., 1978, “Analog Simulator of a Josephson Quantum Interference
`Device”, Review of Scientific Instruments, 49(6), pp. 835-839.
`• Tuckerman, D. B., 1980, “A Josephson Ultrahigh-Resolution Sampling System”,
`Applied Physics Letters, 36(12), pp. 1008-1010.
`• Tuckerman, D. B., and Magerlein, J. H., 1980, “Resonances in Symmetric
`Josephson Interferometers”, A

This document is available on Docket Alarm but you must sign up to view it.


Or .

Accessing this document will incur an additional charge of $.

After purchase, you can access this document again without charge.

Accept $ Charge
throbber

Still Working On It

This document is taking longer than usual to download. This can happen if we need to contact the court directly to obtain the document and their servers are running slowly.

Give it another minute or two to complete, and then try the refresh button.

throbber

A few More Minutes ... Still Working

It can take up to 5 minutes for us to download a document if the court servers are running slowly.

Thank you for your continued patience.

This document could not be displayed.

We could not find this document within its docket. Please go back to the docket page and check the link. If that does not work, go back to the docket and refresh it to pull the newest information.

Your account does not support viewing this document.

You need a Paid Account to view this document. Click here to change your account type.

Your account does not support viewing this document.

Set your membership status to view this document.

With a Docket Alarm membership, you'll get a whole lot more, including:

  • Up-to-date information for this case.
  • Email alerts whenever there is an update.
  • Full text search for other cases.
  • Get email alerts whenever a new case matches your search.

Become a Member

One Moment Please

The filing “” is large (MB) and is being downloaded.

Please refresh this page in a few minutes to see if the filing has been downloaded. The filing will also be emailed to you when the download completes.

Your document is on its way!

If you do not receive the document in five minutes, contact support at support@docketalarm.com.

Sealed Document

We are unable to display this document, it may be under a court ordered seal.

If you have proper credentials to access the file, you may proceed directly to the court's system using your government issued username and password.


Access Government Site

We are redirecting you
to a mobile optimized page.





Document Unreadable or Corrupt

Refresh this Document
Go to the Docket

We are unable to display this document.

Refresh this Document
Go to the Docket