throbber
Case 3:14-cv-00757-REP-DJN Document 221 Filed 07/30/15 Page 1 of 51 PageID# 20211
`E
`
`R
`
`IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
`
`FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF VIRGINIA
`Richmond Division
`
`CLP"K
`
`P
`
`JUL 3 0 2015
`
`SAMSUNG ELECTRONICS CO., LTD,
`et al.
`
`Plaintiffs,
`
`V.
`
`Civil Case No. 3:14-cv-757
`
`NVIDIA CORPORATION,
`et al,
`
`Defendants
`
`MEMORANDUM OPINION
`
`This matter is before the Court for claim construction of U.S.
`
`Patent Nos. 5, 860, 158 {the "'158 Patent"), 6,262, 938
`
`(the '"938
`
`Patent"),
`
`6,287,902
`
`{the "'902 Patent"),
`
`6,819,602
`
`(the "'602
`
`Patent"), 8,252,675 {the "'675 Patent"), and 6,804,724 (the "'724
`
`Patent'").
`
`BACKGROUND
`
`The Plaintiffs,
`
`Samsung Electronics Co.,
`
`LTD and Samsung
`
`Electronics America ("Samsung") assert claims for infringement of
`
`the '158 Patent,
`
`the '938 Patent,
`
`the '902 Patent,
`
`the '602 Patent,
`
`the
`
`' 675
`
`Patent,
`
`and
`
`the
`
`'724
`
`Patent
`
`(collectively
`
`the
`
`"Patents-in-Suit")
`
`against
`
`the Defendants, NVIDIA Corporation
`
`("NVIDIA"), Old Micro Inc.
`
`("Old Micro"), and Velocity Holdings LLC
`
`

`
`Case 3:14-cv-00757-REP-DJN Document 221 Filed 07/30/15 Page 2 of 51 PageID# 20212
`
`(''Velocity")
`
`(collectively,
`
`''Defendants") .
`
`The Patents-in-Suit
`
`relate to a method of building computer chips, systems which control
`
`a computer's operations, and a display adaptor linking a computer
`
`with an analog display.
`
`The parties have offered thirteen claims
`
`and one preamble for construction.
`
`DISCUSSION
`
`I.
`
`Legal Standard
`
`The purpose of claim construction is to "determin[e] the meaning
`
`and scope of the patent claims asserted to be infringed." Markman
`
`V. Westview Instruments, Inc., 52 F.3d 967, 976 (Fed. Cir. 1995)
`
`(en
`
`banc), aff'd, 517 U.S. 370 (1996).
`
`The construction of a claim is
`
`a question of law.
`
`Id.
`
`A term should be construed by the Court whenever there is an
`
`actual, legitimate dispute as to the proper scope of the claims.
`
`02
`
`Micro Int'l Ltd. v. Beyond Innovation Tech. Co., 521 F.Sd 1351, 1360
`
`(Fed. Cir. 2008). However, "a district court is not obligated to
`
`construe terms with ordinary meanings, lest trial courts be inundated
`
`with requests to parse the meaning of every word in the asserted
`
`claims."
`
`Id.
`
`Furthermore,
`
`some claim terms will be so simple that "the
`
`ordinary meaning of claim language as understood by a person of skill
`
`in the art may be readily apparent even to lay judges, and claim
`
`construction in such cases involves little more than the application
`
`

`
`Case 3:14-cv-00757-REP-DJN Document 221 Filed 07/30/15 Page 3 of 51 PageID# 20213
`
`of
`
`the widely accepted meaning of
`
`commonly understood words."
`
`Phillips V. AWH Corp., 415 F.3d 1303, 1314 (Fed. Cir. 2005). And,
`
`''a sound claim construction need not always purge every shred of
`
`ambiguity.
`
`The
`
`resolution of
`
`some
`
`line-drawing problems —
`
`especially easy ones . . . — is properly left to the trier of fact."
`
`Acumed LLC v. Stryker Corp., 483 F.3d 800, 806 {Fed. Cir. 2007) .
`
`As
`
`recognized in 02 Micro,
`
`''district courts are not
`
`(and should not be)
`
`required to construe every limitation present in a patent's asserted
`
`claims . . . . Claim construction ^is not an obligatory exercise
`
`in redundancy.'"
`
`521 F.3d at 1362 (quoting U.S. Surgical Corp. v.
`
`Ethicon,
`
`Inc., 103 F.3d 1554, 1568 (Fed. Cir. 1997)).
`
`''Claim terms are generally given their plain and ordinary
`
`meanings to one of skill in the art when read in the context of the
`
`specification and prosecution history." Hill-Rom Servs,
`
`Inc. v.
`
`Stryker Corp, 755 F.3d 1367, 1371 (Fed. Cir. 2014) .
`
`"There are only
`
`two exceptions to this general rule: 1) when a patentee sets out a
`
`definition and acts as his own lexicographer, or 2) when the patentee
`
`disavows the full scope of the claim term either in the specification
`
`or during prosecution. " Thorner v. Sony Computer Entm't Am LLC, 669
`
`F.3d 1362, 1365 (Fed. Cir. 2012).
`
`"[I]n interpreting an asserted
`
`claim,
`
`the court should look first
`
`to the intrinsic evidence of
`
`record,
`
`i.e.,
`
`the patent
`
`itself,
`
`including the
`
`claims,
`
`the
`
`specification, and, if in evidence,
`
`the prosecution history... Such
`
`

`
`Case 3:14-cv-00757-REP-DJN Document 221 Filed 07/30/15 Page 4 of 51 PageID# 20214
`
`intrinsic evidence is the most significant source of the legally
`
`operative meaning of disputed claim language." Vitronics Corp. v.
`
`Conceptronic, Inc., 90 F.3d 1576, 1582 {Fed. Cir. 1996). Of these
`
`sources,
`
`the words of the claim should be the Court's controlling
`
`focus.
`
`See Phillips, 415 F. 3d at 1314; see also Digital Biometrics,
`
`Inc. v.
`
`Identix,
`
`Inc., 149 F.3d 1335, 1344 (Fed. Cir. 1998).
`
`^'Where the intrinsic record is ambiguous, and when necessary,
`
`[the Court may]
`
`rely on extrinsic evidence, which consists of all
`
`evidence external to the patent and prosecution history,
`
`including
`
`expert and inventor testimony, dictionaries, and learned treatises."
`
`Power Integrations, Inc. v. Fairchild Semiconductor, Intern., Inc.,
`
`711 F.3d 1348, 1360 (Fed. Cir. 2013). Extrinsic evidence, however,
`
`may not be used to contract or expand the claim language or the
`
`meanings established in the specification. Phillips, 415 F.3d at
`
`1318-19;
`
`Vitronics, 90 F.3d at 1584. As explained in Nystrom v.
`
`Trex Co.,
`
`[I]n the absence of something in the written description
`and/or prosecution history to provide explicit or implicit
`notice to the public — i.e., those of ordinary skill in
`the art — that the inventor intended a disputed term to
`cover more
`than the ordinary and customary meaning
`revealed by the context of the intrinsic record, it is
`improper to read the term to encompass a broader definition
`simply because it may be found in a dictionary, treatise,
`or other extrinsic source.
`
`424 F.3d 1136, 1145 (Fed. Cir. 2005).
`
`

`
`Case 3:14-cv-00757-REP-DJN Document 221 Filed 07/30/15 Page 5 of 51 PageID# 20215
`
`II.
`
`Claim Construction
`
`The terms tendered for construction are:
`
`(1)
`
`(2)
`
`(3)
`
`(4)
`
`(5)
`
`(6)
`
`(7)
`
`(8)
`
`^'Depositing a second metal gate electrode layer onto inner
`sidewalls of the spacers and onto an upper surface of the
`patterned first metal gate electrode layer," which appears
`in the ^675 patent;
`
`third metal gate electrode layer onto the
`''Depositing a
`second metal gate electrode layer," which appears in the
`^675 patent;
`
`"A gate insulating layer," which appears
`patent;
`
`in the ^675
`
`[second]
`the
`sidewall of
`"Insulating spacer along a
`patterned conductive layer," which appears in the ^902
`patent;
`
`"An insulating layer," which appears in the ^902 patent;
`
`"Forming a trench in said substrate, and wherein said field
`isolation layer fills said trench," which appears in the
`^902 patent;
`
`"Request
`
`ID [value]," which appears in the ^158 patent;
`
`"Controlling propagation delay time, " which appears in the
`^602 patent;
`
`(9)
`
`"Reference voltage," which appears in the ^602 patent;
`
`(10) "Determined/Determining," which
`patent;
`
`appears
`
`in the
`
`^938
`
`(11) "Shift register for delaying," which appears in the ^938
`patent;
`
`(12) "Sending parallel digital video data," which appears in
`the ^724 patent;
`
`(13)
`
`"Means for generating a cable sensing signal to be sent
`to said first external video port over the digital cable,
`thereby informing the video controller of the digital
`cable connection state of said first external port," which
`appears in the ^724 patent.
`
`

`
`Case 3:14-cv-00757-REP-DJN Document 221 Filed 07/30/15 Page 6 of 51 PageID# 20216
`
`Additionally,
`
`the parties disagree as to whether the preamble of
`
`Claim 19 of the ^938 Patent is limiting.
`
`a)
`
`^675 Patent
`
`Samsung asserts claims 12, 13, and 14 against Defendants in its
`
`Second Amended Complaint. Docket No. 81.
`
`1.
`
`^^Depositing a second metal gate electrode layer onto
`inner sidewalls of
`the spacers and onto an upper
`surface of the patterned first metal gate electrode
`layer"
`
`The Defendants' proposed construction is ''applying, using
`
`conformal (i.e. U-shaped) deposition, one metal gate electrode layer
`
`to the inner sidewalls of the spacers and to the upper surface of
`
`the patterned first metal gate electrode layer."
`
`Samsung's proposed
`
`construction is ''creating a structure comprising one or more metal
`
`sublayers each formed by a deposition process onto inner sidewalls
`
`of the spacers and onto an upper surface of the patterned first metal
`
`gate electrode layer."
`
`The parties' dispute focuses on the whether
`
`the second metal gate electrode layer can have more than one layer
`
`and whether it must be formed using conformal deposition.
`
`a)
`
`Words of the Claim
`
`The term "depositing a second metal gate electrode layer onto
`
`inner sidewalls of the spacers and onto an upper surface of the
`
`patterned first metal gate electrode layer" appears in claim 6 in
`
`the ^675 Patent.
`
`The language of Claim 6 of the '675 patent describes
`
`the following claim:
`
`

`
`Case 3:14-cv-00757-REP-DJN Document 221 Filed 07/30/15 Page 7 of 51 PageID# 20217
`
`forming an integrated circuit
`A method of
`device, comprising:
`
`depositing a second metal gate electrode layer
`onto inner sidewalls of the spacers and onto an
`upper surface of the patterned first metal date
`electrode layer
`
`'675 Patent at 11:39-40, 58-60.
`
`b)
`
`Specification and Prosecution History
`
`The '675 Patent specification and figures consistently refer
`
`to and show the ''second metal gate electrode layer" as a single layer.
`
`See, e.g.
`
`'675 Patent at Fig. 14, 5:28, 5:37 ^.
`
`However,
`
`the
`
`specification also states that the second metal gate electrode layer
`
`"may comprise a titanium nitride layer that is formed by a chemical
`
`vapor deposition (CVD) or an atomic layer deposition (ALD) " and that
`
`it "may include titanium nitride. "
`
`Id. at 5:5-8, 2:2-3.
`
`The second
`
`metal gate electrode layer is also described as "'U' shaped" in the
`
`specification.
`
`Id. at 5:42-44.
`
`Defendants argue that the prosecution history of the '675 patent
`
`support a finding that Samsung has disclaimed the use of multiple
`
`layers for the second metal gate electrode layer.
`
`In a response to
`
`the patent examiner's rejection,
`
`the '675 applicant attempted to
`
`distinguish his invention from the prior art by stating that the prior
`
`art lacked a "planar metal buffer gate electrode" and did not disclose
`
`^ The second metal gate electrode layer is referred to as the "first
`metal
`layer" in the '67 5 specification.
`7
`
`

`
`Case 3:14-cv-00757-REP-DJN Document 221 Filed 07/30/15 Page 8 of 51 PageID# 20218
`
`''patterning of a first metal gate electrode layer in advance of
`
`forming electrically insulating spacers and in advance of removing
`
`a dummy gate electrode layer." Docket No. 183-1 at 8. Rather,
`
`the
`
`prior art
`
`''merely illustrate [d] conformal deposition of multiple
`
`metal layers in sequence into pre-formed recesses in order to define
`
`composite metal gate electrodes."
`
`Id.
`
`The applicant then went on
`
`to state that the prior art was "prone to void formation when used
`
`to fabricate relatively narrow gate electrodes associated with
`
`highly integrated transistors" and that
`
`the "void formation may
`
`result from a premature closure of the recess during each conformal
`
`metal deposition step."
`
`Id. at 8-9.
`
`c)
`
`Extrinsic Evidence
`
`The parties do not cite to any extrinsic evidence.
`
`d)
`
`Correct Construction
`
`It is unnecessary to resolve Defendants'
`
`argument
`
`that
`
`the
`
`patent applicant disclaimed the use of multiple layers during the
`
`course of patent prosecution.
`
`The claim language plainly states
`
`that the second metal gate electrode layer must be deposited "onto
`
`an upper surface" of the first metal gate electrode layer.
`
`'675
`
`Patent at 11: 58-60. Only one layer can be deposited onto the lower
`
`layer's surface.
`
`Thus,
`
`in order to comply with the claim's plain
`
`language,
`
`the second metal gate electrode layer can only consist of
`
`one layer.
`
`8
`
`

`
`Case 3:14-cv-00757-REP-DJN Document 221 Filed 07/30/15 Page 9 of 51 PageID# 20219
`
`Further,
`
`the Defendants have failed to support their argument
`
`that the deposition of the second metal gate electrode layer must
`
`be done conformally.
`
`That
`
`language is not found in the intrinsic
`
`evidence, and the Defendants have not adequately supported their
`
`argument that the claim's ''U-shaped" language means ''conformal."
`
`Thus,
`
`the proper construction of the term ''second metal gate
`
`electrode layer" is its plain and ordinary meaning.
`
`The claim
`
`language will be used.
`
`2 .
`
`^^Depositing a third metal gate electrode layer onto the
`second metal gate electrode layer"
`
`The Defendants' proposed construction is "applying, without
`
`using conformal deposition, a metal gate electrode layer to the one
`
`conformal metal
`
`gate
`
`electrode
`
`layer."
`
`Samsung's
`
`proposed
`
`construction is "creating a structure comprising one or more metal
`
`sublayers each formed by a deposition process onto the second metal
`
`gate electrode layer."
`
`The parties' dispute focuses on the whether
`
`the third metal gate electrode layer can have more than one layer
`
`and whether the manner in which it is formed must be non-conformal.
`
`a)
`
`Words of the Claim
`
`Claim 6 contains the language to be constructed.
`
`The language
`
`of Claim 6 of the ^675 patent contains the following language:
`
`forming an integrated circuit
`A method of
`device, comprising:
`
`

`
`Case 3:14-cv-00757-REP-DJN Document 221 Filed 07/30/15 Page 10 of 51 PageID# 20220
`
`third metal gate electrode layer
`Depositing a
`onto the second metal gate electrode layer to
`thereby fill a space between the inner sidewalls
`of the spacers, said second and third metal gate
`electrode
`layers
`comprising
`different
`materials.
`
`^675 Patent at 11:39-40; 11:61-12:3.
`
`b)
`
`Specification and Prosecution History
`
`The
`
`^675 Patent
`
`specification and
`
`the
`
`figures
`
`therein
`
`consistently refer to and show the ^'third metal gate electrode layer"^
`
`as a single layer.
`
`See, e.g.
`
`^675 Patent at Fig. 17, 6:4, 6:12.
`
`However,
`
`the ^675 Patent specification states that the third metal
`
`gate electrode layer
`
`^'may comprise at
`
`least one of
`
`aluminum,
`
`tungsten,
`
`titanium, and tantalum that is formed by a method such as
`
`PVD or CVD."
`
`'*675 Patent at 5:66-6:1.
`
`Further i t states that the
`
`third metal gate electrode layer
`
`^'may comprise at
`
`least one of
`
`aluminum, tungsten, and titanium that are formed by PVD or CVD."
`
`Id.
`
`at 9:19-24.
`
`The CVD deposition process is expressly contemplated
`
`for both the second and third metal gate electrode layers.
`
`Id. at
`
`9:19-24, 5:5-8.
`
`The Defendants point again to the prosecution history and argue
`
`that
`
`the deposition must be '"non-conformal" because the patent
`
`applicant made it clear that he was not using multiple conformal
`
`layers which were prone to ''void formation."
`
`^ The ''third metal gate electrode layer" is called the "second metal
`layer" in the specification. Docket No. 181 at 9.
`10
`
`

`
`Case 3:14-cv-00757-REP-DJN Document 221 Filed 07/30/15 Page 11 of 51 PageID# 20221
`
`c)
`
`Extrinsic Evidence
`
`At oral argument, Samsung cited to the Thin Film Dictionary to
`
`show that ^'conformal" means
`
`a deposition wherein the ^'thickness
`
`remains the same regardless of the underlying geometrical features."
`
`d)
`
`Correct Construction
`
`Unlike the language requiring that
`
`the second metal gate
`
`electrode layer be ^'deposited onto the surface" of the underlying
`
`layer, the ^675 Patent states only that the third metal gate electrode
`
`layer
`
`be
`
`''deposit [ed] ... onto"
`
`the
`
`underlying
`
`layer.
`
`This
`
`less-restrictive language,
`
`in combination with the ''comprising"
`
`language of the specification^, supports the interpretation that the
`
`third metal gate electrode layer can consist of multiple sub-layers.
`
`Additionally,
`
`the Defendants have failed to prove that
`
`the
`
`proper construction requires that
`
`the third metal gate electrode
`
`layer be applied "without using conformal deposition."
`
`The claim
`
`language does not support such a construction, as it does not limit
`
`the manner
`
`in which the third metal gate electrode layer can be
`
`applied.
`
`Finally,
`
`the supposed disclaimer
`
`language discussed in the
`
`"second metal gate electrode" analysis does not support a finding
`
`^ It is well-established that the term "comprising" means "including,
`but not limited to."
`See CIAS v. Alliance Gaming Corp., 504 F.3d
`1356, 1360 (Fed. Cir. 2007)
`("(cid:127)*comprising'
`is well understood to mean
`'including but not
`limited to.'").
`11
`
`

`
`Case 3:14-cv-00757-REP-DJN Document 221 Filed 07/30/15 Page 12 of 51 PageID# 20222
`
`of a disclaimer in the '975 patent.
`
`The Court requires a "'clear and
`
`unambiguous disavowal of claim scope" in order to impart a limitation
`
`from the prosecution history into the language of the claim as a
`
`disclaimer.
`
`Storage Technology Corp. v. Cisco Systems,
`
`Inc., 329
`
`F.3d 823, 833 (Fed. Cir. 2003).
`
`The correspondence provided here
`
`merely indicates that the patent applicant was distinguishing the
`
`prior art based on its absence of
`
`a
`
`"'planar metal buffer gate
`
`electrode" and "'patterning of a first metal gate electrode layer in
`
`advance of forming electrically insulating spacers and in advance
`
`of
`
`removing a
`
`dummy gate electrode."
`
`Docket No.
`
`182-1 at 8.
`
`Although the applicant did note that the prior art's technique was
`
`"prone to void formation", such language does not constitute the type
`
`of "clear and unambiguous" language that
`
`the law requires for a
`
`disclaimer.
`
`Thus, the proper construction is "depositing a third metal gate
`
`electrode layer comprised of one or more metal sublayers onto the
`
`second metal gate electrode layer."
`
`2.
`
`gate insulating layer"
`
`The Defendants propose that this term should be given its plain
`
`and ordinary meaning.
`
`Samsung's proposed construction is "a
`
`structure comprising one or more dielectric sublayers." Thus,
`
`the
`
`parties' dispute focuses on the whether the insulating layer can have
`
`more than one layer.
`
`12
`
`

`
`Case 3:14-cv-00757-REP-DJN Document 221 Filed 07/30/15 Page 13 of 51 PageID# 20223
`
`a)
`
`Words of the Claim
`
`The term ^'gate insulating layer" appears in several claims in
`
`the ^675 Patent. First,
`
`the language of Claim 1 of the ^675 patent
`
`describes the following claim:
`
`forming
`of
`A method
`transistor, comprising:
`
`an
`
`insulated-gate
`
`a
`forming
`substrate...
`
`gate
`
`insulating
`
`layer
`
`on
`
`a
`
`^675 Patent at 10:59-63.
`
`Next,
`
`the language of Claim 3 of the ^675 patent describes the
`
`following claim, which is dependent on Claim 1:
`
`the
`wherein
`Claim 1,
`of
`method
`The
`PMOS
`is
`a
`transistor
`insulating-gate
`transistor;
`and wherein the gate insulating
`layer comprises hafnium oxide.
`
`^675 Patent at 11:31-33.
`
`Next, Claim 6 of the ^675 patent describes the following claim:
`
`forming an integrated circuit
`A method of
`device, comprising:
`
`a
`forming
`substrate...
`
`gate
`
`insulating
`
`layer
`
`on
`
`a
`
`^675 Patent at 11:39-41.
`
`Finally, Claim 15 of the ^675 patent describes the following
`
`claim that is also dependent on Claim 6:
`
`13
`
`

`
`Case 3:14-cv-00757-REP-DJN Document 221 Filed 07/30/15 Page 14 of 51 PageID# 20224
`
`the gate
`claim 6, wherein
`The method of
`dielectric
`insulating
`layer
`comprises
`a
`material selected from a group consisting of
`hafnium oxide and tantalum oxide.
`
`^675 Patent at 12:69-61.
`
`a)
`
`Specification and Prosecution History
`
`The
`
`^675 Patent's
`
`specification states
`
`that
`
`the
`
`^^gate
`
`insulating layer...may comprise at
`
`least one of hafnium oxide,
`
`tantalum oxide, silicon oxide and other high-k dielectric layer."
`
`^675 Patent at 6:13-5. However,
`
`the specification and figures do
`
`consistently refer to and show the ''gate insulating layer" as a single
`
`layer.
`
`See, e.g.
`
`^675 Patent at Fig. 2-17 & 19-37, 3:43, 4:51.
`
`b)
`
`Extrinsic Evidence
`
`The parties do not present any extrinsic evidence.
`
`c)
`
`Correct Construction
`
`Both
`
`the
`
`claim language
`
`and
`
`the
`
`specification use
`
`the
`
`''comprising" language and thus support an interpretation that allows
`
`the gate insulating layer to be made up of multiple materials.
`
`See
`
`^675 Patent at 6:13-5, 11:31-33, and 12:69-61. While Defendants
`
`argue that this suggests that these multiple materials could be laid
`
`in one single layer in an alloy form, it is also possible that they
`
`could be laid sequentially,
`
`thus forming multiple layers in the gate
`
`insulating layer.
`
`Further, although Claim 6 does state that the gate
`
`insulating layer is to be formed "on a substrate", such language does
`
`14
`
`

`
`Case 3:14-cv-00757-REP-DJN Document 221 Filed 07/30/15 Page 15 of 51 PageID# 20225
`
`not require that each part of the gate insulating layer must touch
`
`the substrate - a top layer can be ''on" a bottom layer without coming
`
`into direct contact with the bottom layer.
`
`Thus,
`
`the correct
`
`construction of this term is ''a gate comprising one or more insulating
`
`sublayers."
`
`b)
`
`'902 Patent
`
`Samsung alleges infringement of claims 1, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 9, 10,
`
`15, and 16 in its Second Amended Complaint. Docket No. 81.
`
`1.
`
`'^Insulating spacer along a sidewall of the [second]
`patterned conductive layer"
`
`The Defendants' proposed construction is ''an insulting spacer,
`
`along a sidewall of the [second] patterned conductive layer,
`
`that
`
`prevents etch damage to the field isolation layer if the contact hole
`
`is misaligned."
`
`Samsung's proposed construction is "an insulating
`
`sidewall
`
`spacer adjacent
`
`to the
`
`[second] patterned conductive
`
`layer."
`
`The parties' dispute focuses on the whether the insulating
`
`spacer must prevent etch damage and whether the phrase "spacer along
`
`a sidewall" should be rewritten. At oral argument, Samsung agreed
`
`that
`
`the claim language
`
`"spacer along a
`
`sidewall" adequately
`
`described the patent and agreed to use the claim language instead
`
`of
`
`the
`
`"spacer
`
`adjacent"
`
`language
`
`proposed
`
`in their
`
`claim
`
`construction briefs. Docket No. 214 at 6:6-7:21.
`
`Thus,
`
`the only
`
`dispute to evaluate at this point is whether the sidewall spacer must
`
`prevent etch damage.
`
`15
`
`

`
`Case 3:14-cv-00757-REP-DJN Document 221 Filed 07/30/15 Page 16 of 51 PageID# 20226
`
`a)
`
`Words of the Claim
`
`The term ^'insulating spacer along a sidewall of the [second
`
`patterned conductive layer" appears in several claims in the ^902
`
`Patent.
`
`The term at issue is found in Claims 1, 11, 12, 15, and 18.
`
`First,
`
`the language of Claim 1 of the ^902 patent describes the
`
`following claim:
`
`a
`forming a contact hole for
`A method for
`microelectronic
`structure,
`said
`method
`comprising the steps of:
`
`forming an etch inhibiting layer of said field
`isolation layer adjacent said active region of
`said substrate, the active region including the
`first patterned conductive layer wherein said
`etch
`inhibiting layer
`comprises
`a
`second
`patterned conductive layer and an insulating
`spacer along a sidewall of the second patterned
`conductive layer, wherein the second pattern
`conductive layer does not extend over the active
`region of the substrate, and wherein the second
`patterned conductive layer is a dummy pattern
`electrically isolated from the substrate and
`circuits thereon.
`
`'902 Patent at 6:48-50, 57-67.
`
`Claim 11, Claim 12, Claim 15, and Claim 18 of the '902 patent
`contain the following language:
`
`a microelectronic
`forming
`for
`A method
`structure, said method comprising the steps of:
`
`forming a second patterned layer on said field
`isolation layer adjacent said active region of
`
`16
`
`

`
`Case 3:14-cv-00757-REP-DJN Document 221 Filed 07/30/15 Page 17 of 51 PageID# 20227
`
`said substrate, the active region including the
`first patterned layer wherein
`said second
`a
`patterned
`layer
`comprises
`patterned
`conductive layer and an insulating spacer along
`a sidewall of the patterned conductive layer,
`wherein the patterned conductive layer does not
`extend over the active region of the substrate,
`and wherein the patterned conductive layer is
`a dummy pattern electrically isolated from the
`substrate and circuits thereon."^
`
`^902 Patent at 7:40-41, 49-58; 8:1-2, 9-18; 8:33-34, 42-51; 8:66-67,
`
`9:7-16.
`
`b)
`
`Specification and Prosecution History
`
`The specification of the ^902 Patent describes the function of
`
`the claim. Specifically, it states that ''if the contact hole extends
`
`beyond the active region of the substrate encroaching into the field
`
`region a second patterned conductive layer...reduces the likelihood
`
`that
`
`a well will be
`
`formed in the field isolation layer... In
`
`particular,
`
`the second patterned conductive lawyer...can act as an
`
`etch stop if needed when etching the insulating layer."
`
`Id. at
`
`4:43-49. Additionally,
`
`the specification states that ''the second
`
`patterned conductive layer and associated spacers protect the field
`
`isolation layer
`
`from the etch used to form the contact hole.
`
`Accordingly, even with a misalignment of the contact hole mask over
`
`the field region and over etching to insure exposure of the active
`
`region,
`
`the field isolation layer is not damaged."
`
`Id. at 6:8-13.
`
`the word
`to Claim 1 except for that
`^ These claims are identical
`"second" has been removed from "insulating spacer along a sidewall
`of the second patterned conductive layer.
`17
`
`

`
`Case 3:14-cv-00757-REP-DJN Document 221 Filed 07/30/15 Page 18 of 51 PageID# 20228
`
`The Defendants argue that Samsung's correspondence with the
`
`patent examiner during prosecution supports the proposed functional
`
`limitation.
`
`During prosecution of
`
`the ^902 Patent,
`
`the patent
`
`examiner rejected the patent applicant's application as obvious in
`
`light of the prior art.
`
`Docket No. 183-2 at 6.
`
`The prior art -
`
`referred to as the Michihiro patent- had disclosed the use of dummy
`
`gates to prevent damage to the field isolation layer, but had not
`
`incorporated the use of sidewall spacers to assist in that process.
`
`Id. at 6-7.
`
`The patent examiner had thought that it was obvious to
`
`combine the dummy gates of the Michihiro patent with sidewall spacers
`
`found in the Chen patent, and thus denied Samsung's application.
`
`The patent applicant responded to this denial and argued that
`
`its claims were patentable over the prior art. Docket No. 183-3.
`
`The patent applicant argued that it had no motivation to combine the
`
`Michihiro dummy gates with the Chen sidewall spacers.
`
`Id. at 18
`
`('MT]here is no clear and particular evidence of a motivation for
`
`modifying Michihiro in view of Chen.")
`
`Attempting to further
`
`distinguish its application from the Michihiro patent,
`
`the patent
`
`applicant stated that ^'there is simply no mention in Michihiro that
`
`it is desirable to prevent damage to the field oxide layer...There
`
`is nothing in Michihiro which suggests that there is need to include
`
`spacers that would prevent damage to the field oxide layer in the
`
`event the contact hole is misaligned."
`
`Id.
`
`a 19.
`
`18
`
`

`
`Case 3:14-cv-00757-REP-DJN Document 221 Filed 07/30/15 Page 19 of 51 PageID# 20229
`
`The
`
`patent
`
`examiner
`
`responded
`
`and
`
`allowed
`
`the
`
`patent
`
`applicant's claims.
`
`He stated in his "'reasons for allowance" that
`
`'"the prior art of record fails to disclose all the process limitations
`
`recited in the base claims,
`
`including a combination of a step of
`
`forming a dummy patterns as an etch inhibiting layer on a field
`
`isolation layer and a step of forming along the sidewalls of a dummy
`
`patterns the spacers that will prevent damage to the field oxide layer
`
`in the event the contact hole is misaligned." Docket No. 183-4 at
`
`5. According to Defendants,
`
`this exchange supports a finding of a
`
`disclaimer of sidewall spacers which do not prevent etch damage by
`
`Samsung.
`
`c)
`
`Extrinsic Evidence
`
`The parties present no extrinsic evidence.
`
`d)
`
`Correct Construction
`
`The Court requires a "clear and unambiguous disavowal of claim
`
`scope" in order to impart a limitation from the prosecution history
`
`into the language of the claim as a disclaimer.
`
`Storage Technology
`
`Corp. V. Cisco Systems,
`
`Inc., 329 F.3d 823, 833 (Fed. Cir. 2003).
`
`The Defendants have failed to demonstrate that the exchange between
`
`the ^902 patent applicant and the patent examiner constituted such
`
`a ''clear and unambiguous disavowal" of sidewall spacers which did
`
`not prevent damage to the field isolation layer.
`
`There is nothing
`
`about
`
`the above exchange that supports a finding that
`
`the patent
`
`19
`
`

`
`Case 3:14-cv-00757-REP-DJN Document 221 Filed 07/30/15 Page 20 of 51 PageID# 20230
`
`applicant was voluntarily limiting the scope of his patent. Rather,
`
`he was attempting to illustrate to the patent examiner
`
`that his
`
`invention was not obvious in light of the Michihiro patent because
`
`the Michihiro patent did not contain any sidewall spacers.
`
`Thus,
`
`the correct construction is to retain the claim language of
`
`^'insulating spacer along a sidewall."
`
`2.
`
`"An insulating layer"
`
`The Defendants propose that the term be given its plain and
`
`ordinary meaning.
`
`Samsung's proposed construction is ""a structure
`
`comprising one or more electrically insulating layers." Thus,
`
`the
`
`parties' dispute focuses on the whether the insulating layer can have
`
`more than one layer.
`
`a)
`
`Words of the Claim
`
`The term ''an insulating layer" appears in several claims in the
`
`^902 Patent.
`
`The term at issue is found in Claims 1, 2, 11, 12, 15,
`
`and 18.
`
`First, the language of Claim 1 of the ^902 patent describes
`
`the following claim:
`
`a
`forming a contact hole for
`A method for
`microelectronic
`structure,
`said
`method
`comprising the steps of:
`
`forming an insulating layer on said substrate,
`said
`field
`isolation
`layer,
`said
`first
`patterned conductive
`layer,
`and
`said etch
`inhibiting layer; and
`
`20
`
`

`
`Case 3:14-cv-00757-REP-DJN Document 221 Filed 07/30/15 Page 21 of 51 PageID# 20231
`
`forming a contact hole in said insulating layer
`exposing a portion of said active region between
`said etch inhibiting layer
`and said first
`patterned conductive layer
`
`^902 Patent at 6:48-50, 7:1-6.
`
`Next,
`
`the language of Claim 2, which is dependent on Claim 1
`
`of the '902 Patent states:
`
`A method according to claim 1 wherein said
`insulting layer comprises nitride.
`
`Id. at 7:7-8.
`
`Additionally, the language of Claim 11, Claim 12, Claim 15, and
`
`Claim 18 state:
`
`a microelectronic
`forming
`for
`A method
`structure, said method comprising the steps of:
`
`said
`cover
`layer
`insulating
`an
`Forming
`substrate, said field isolation layer, and said
`first and second patterned layers; and
`
`Forming a contact hole in said insulating layer
`wherein said contact hole exposes a portion of
`said action region between said first and second
`patterned layers.
`
`^ a t 7:40-41, 58-64; 8:1-2, 19-25; 8:33-34, 52-57; 8:66-67, 10:3-9.
`
`b)
`
`Specification and Prosecu-tion History
`
`The '902 Patent's specification and claims serially describe
`
`and depict the insulating layer as just that - a singular layer.
`
`See
`
`'902 Patent, Fig. 4-8, 4:32, 4:37, 5:60, 5:63 (using the term
`
`21
`
`

`
`Case 3:14-cv-00757-REP-DJN Document 221 Filed 07/30/15 Page 22 of 51 PageID# 20232
`
`"'insulating layer") .
`
`However, prior art cited by the patent
`
`applicant during prosecution describes an insulating layer that
`
`includes multiple sublayers.
`
`See U.S. Patent 5,659,202 at 4:10-14
`
`{'"An interlayer insulation film. . .may be,
`
`for example formed of a
`
`single-layer
`
`film or
`
`lamination of
`
`[multiple materials]); U.S.
`
`Patent
`
`5,293,503
`
`at
`
`3:15-19
`
`("'... in
`
`interlayer
`
`insulating
`
`film...consisting of
`
`a
`
`first silicon oxide film...and a
`
`second
`
`silicon oxide film...").
`
`c)
`
`Extrinsic Evidence
`
`The parties cite to no extrinsic evidence.
`
`d)
`
`Correct Construction
`
`As Samsung pointed out. Claim 1 describes the method claimed,
`
`which includes the use of "'an insulating layer."
`
`Dependent Claim
`
`2, which describes and must be narrower than Claim 1, states that
`
`the insulating layer comprises nitride.
`
`It is well-established, as
`
`discussed above, that the term "comprising" is open-ended and permits
`
`for additional elements. Claim 2,
`
`therefore, allows for multiple
`
`materials to be used in forming the insulating layer. While these
`
`materials could be combined to form an alloy, they also could be laid
`
`down separately and thus form more than one insulating layer.
`
`Thus,
`
`multiple layers are cognizable within the language of the patent,
`
`and the term is correctly defined as a "structure comprising one or
`
`more electrical insulating layers."
`
`22
`
`

`
`Case 3:14-cv-00757-REP-DJN Document 221 Filed 07/30/15 Page 23 of 51 PageID# 20233
`
`3.
`
`^^Forming a trench in said substrate, and wherein said
`field isolation layer fills said trench"
`
`The Defendants propose that
`
`the term be given its plain and
`
`ordinary meaning.
`
`Samsung's proposed construction is ^'etching a
`
`recess into said substrate and subsequently filling said recess with
`
`a field isolation layer."
`
`Samsung proposes that a construction in
`
`order to make i t clear that i t does not claim the LOCOS method of
`
`forming a field isolation layer.
`
`At oral argument,
`
`the parties
`
`agreed that it was ^'clear that
`
`[Samsung did not] claim the LOCOS
`
`method" and instead claimed ''the trench method." Docket No. 214 at
`
`54:3-55:21.
`
`Thus,
`
`Samsung is no longer
`
`seeking its

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