Crown Operations International, Ltd., and Mr. Marshall H. Krone (collectively “Crown”), appeal the decision of the United States District Court for the Western District of Wisconsin denying Crown declaratory relief that Solutia’s U.S. Patent No. 4,973,511 (“the '511 patent”) is invalid for lack of novelty and non-obviousness, and that Solutia’s U.S. Patent No. 5,091,-258 (“the '258 patent”) is invalid for lack of enablement and written description. Crown Operations Int’l, Ltd. v. Solutia, Inc., No. 99-C-802-S, slip op. at 8 (W.D.Wis. Aug. 30, 2000) (memorandum decision and order granting summary judgment) (“August 22 Order”); Crown Operations Int’l, Ltd. v. Solutia, Inc., No. 99-C-802-S, slip op. at 24, 27 (W.22 Ord er”). Because we find no error in the district court’s opinion with respect to the '511 patent, we affirm that portion of the district court’s decision. However, because the district court erred in its analysis of enablement for the '258 patent, and did not address the written description issue for the '258 patent, we vacate the district court’s grant of summary judgment on that issue and remand for additional proceedings consistent with this opinion.
I. BACKGROUND
The patents at issue in this appeal relate to layered films used to create safety and solar control glass. An example is an automobile windshield. Most windshields have two layers of glass with a multi-layer film between the glass layers. The multilayer film adds properties to the glass assembly, such as impact resistance or providing a conductive layer that facilitates defrosting the windshield. An inner layer of the film has solar control properties to selectively reflect, absorb (and thus convert to heat) or transmit defined percentages of certain wavelengths of light. This inner layer is called the solar control film. It is made of a substrate coated by one or more layers of metal or metallic substances. '511 patent, col. 3, 1. 64 to col. 4, 1. 2. Typically, manufacturers laminate the solar control film between layers of plasticized polyvinyl butyral (“PVB”) (sometimes called the “safety film”) in a process known as encapsulation. Then, the encapsulated solar control film is sandwiched between two pieces of glass for a final assembly of multi-layer glass with safety and solar control properties.
A. The '511 Patent
The '511 patent is directed to thе problem that the metal-coated substrate, i.e., solar control film, tends to wrinkle during encapsulation causing visual distortions. The '511 patent claims to mask the wrinkles from detection by the human eye by *1371 limiting to two percent or less the visible light reflection contribution of the solar control film compared to reflection from a complete assembly of glass, PVB and solar control film. '511 patent, col. 4, 11. 46^49, col. 8,1. 66 to col. 9,1. 6, col. 14,1. 67 to col. 15, 1. 2. Figure 1 from the '511 patent, set forth below, shows the layers in a complete assembly.
[[Image here]]
The complete safety and solar control glass assembly 10 includes two outer glass layers 28 & 30, PVB layers 22 & 23, and the solar control film 20. The solar control film is comprised оf a substrate layer 16 and solar control coating 18. '511 patent, col. 3,11. 41-53, col. 7,11. 2-4, col. 10,1. 15. Figure 3 from the '511 patent, set forth below, shows the sub-layers of the solar control coating 18.
[[Image here]]
Layer 18 is made of multiple sub-layers. Layers 34 and 36 are metal oxide, and layer 38 is metal. '511 patent, col. 5, 11. 12-14. In addition, the '511 patent notes that “[p]rior automotive windshields have visible light reflection contributions for their solar films of three percent or greater.” Further, it relates that the primary method of achieving a low solar control film reflectance contribution is by providing a specially-designed solar coating. '511 patent, col. 4,11. 56-65.
On December 16, 1999, Crown sued So-lutia (the “Initial Complaint”), seeking, among various other relief, a declaration that the '511 patent was invalid for anticipation and obviousness. Upon the parties’ cross-motions for summary judgment, the district court found the '511 patent not anticipated and not invalid for obviousness. August 22 Order at 24, 27. We discuss herein only those portions of the August 22 Order relevant to the issues on appeal, which relate solely to the summary judgment finding that the '511 patent was not *1372 invalid on the grounds of anticipation and obviousness.
Claim 1, the only independent claim of the '511 patent, is set forth below, with the element numbers from Figure 1 inserted into the claim.
1. A composite solar/safety film [24] for use in a laminated window assembly [10] comprising:
a flexible, transparent plastic substrate layer [16] having a carrier surface and an opposing back surface;
a multilayer solar control coating [18] on said carrier surface, said coated substrate defining a solar control film [20]; and
at least one flexible, transparent, energy absorbing plastic safety layer [23 and/or 22] bonded to a surface of said solar control film;
wherein said solar control film contributes no more than about 2% visible reflectance, based on total visible incident radiation, in a laminated window assembly containing said composite solar/safety film laminated to at least one rigid transparent member [30 and/or 28].
’511 patent, col. 14, 1. 57 to col. 15, 1. 4 (emphasis added and emphasized numbers added to identify elements shown in Figure 1 above).
Crown argued that U.S. Patent No. 4,017,661 to Gillery (the “Gillery patent”) anticiрates the '511 patent. The district court held otherwise, because, while the Gillery patent discloses the first three limitations of claim 1 of the '511 patent, it does not disclose the two percent visible reflectance limitation. The court found that neither the Gillery patent claims nor its description expressly disclose a two percent limit on reflectance contribution from the solar control film layer. Crown argued that the two percent limitation was inherently present in the Gillery patent’s teachings because the Gillery patent disclosed an assembly with PVB layers, substrate layer, and substrate metal-coating — arguably of the same composition and thickness of the films disclosed by the '511 patent. Thus, Crown argued, because the structure, thickness and materials of the assembly were the same or within the same range(s), the Gillery patent must inherently disclose a two percent limitation. The district court rejected this argument because it found that none of the embodiments disclosed by the Gillery patent meet the two percent visible light reflectance limit. 1
In its August 22 Order, the district court also held that the '511 patent was not rendered invalid for obviousness by Gillery or the other prior art cited by Crown because no prior art discloses: (i) that reflectance below two percent will mask wrinkles; (ii) a solar control film layer with reflectance below two percent; оr (iii) any suggestion, motivation or teaching to reduce solar control film visible light reflectivity below two percent. Although the prior art generally sought to reduce visible light reflectivity, it also taught disadvantages of a very thin metal-coating on the substrate, including sacrificing infrared reflectivity. Thus, it taught that the proper compromise to achieve the conflicting goals of infrared (non-visible light) reflectance, visible light transmission and conductivity *1373 was a solar control film with a visible light reflectivity greater than two percent.
B. The '258 Patent
The '258 patent is directed at eliminating optical distortion, called “applesauce,” in safety and solar control glass assemblies of the type discussed abоve for the '511 patent. The '258 patent discloses a method to control distortion otherwise caused by the safety and solar film layer by measuring and controlling the texture of the surface of the PVB layers. The method expresses texture using a “wave index” and a “roughness value.” The wave index calculation is at issue in this appeal. Wave index indicates the relative waviness of the surface of the PVB. Determining wave index involves measuring the surface of the PVB and then aggregating the measurements into a single number, the wave index, through a calculation purportedly described in the '258 patent.
The '258 patent directs one to use an instrument to physically measure the waviness of the surface of the PVB and capture the measurement into an electronic “trace line” representing the contours of the PVB surface. '258 patent, col. 7, II. 54-65. Since the “trace line” is stored electronically, a computer program is used to calculate wave index from the trace. Three figures from the '258 patent, given below, provide examples of PVB surface trace fines.
[[Image here]]
The rules for calculating the wave index implement a “smoothing” function. The smoothing process seeks to eliminate minor inflection points (peaks or valleys) to simplify the calculation of wave index. '258 patent, col. 7, I. 66 to col. 8, I. 2.
In the Initial Complaint, Crown sought a declaration that the '258 patent was invalid for anticipation and obviousness. Then, on May 26, 2000, Crown amended the complaint (the “Amended Complaint”) to additionally claim in Count VI that the '258 patent is invalid under 35 U.S.C. § 112, first paragraph, because it lacked enablement and written description due to ambiguities in the disclosed wave index calculation. In its August 22 Order, the district court found the '258 patent not anticipated and not invalid for obviousness. August 22 Order at 28-29.
With respect to Count VI of Crown’s amended complaint, Solutia moved for *1374 summary judgment on Crown’s enablement and written description claim. Crown opposed Solutia’s summary judgment motion, arguing that the '258 patent did not meet the enablement and written description requirements. The district court found the '258 patent not invalid for lack of enablement, but did not discuss in its opinion the written description requirement. August SO Order at 8-13. We discuss herein only those portions of the August 30 Order relevant to the issues on appeal, which relate to summary judgment finding the '258 patent not invalid on the grounds of enablement and the procedural disposition of the written description issue.
Claim 1 of the '258 patent is set forth below. In the language of this claim, “laminate” refers to the complete glass, PVB and solar control film assembly, and “functional performance layer” refers to the solar control coating. '258 patent, col. 3, II. 45-65.
1. A laminate which is substantially free of reflected distortion when used in a safety glazing comprising:
a transparent, thermoplаstic substrate layer, optionally surface treated or coated, bearing one or more functional performance layers; and
at least one layer of plasticized polyvinyl butyral bonded on one side to a functional performance layer or the substrate layer and having a roughened deairing surface on its other side characterized by a roughness value, Rz, of at least 10 micrometers;
said at least one plasticized polyvinyl butyral [PVB] layer, before bonding to the substrate layer or functional performance layer, possessing low surface waviness on each side characterized by a wave index value, WI, of less than 15,000 square micrometers.
’258 patent, col. 12, II. 2-16 (emphasis added).
Crown argued that the rules disclosed by the '258 patent for calculating wave index are not sufficiently precise to enable a person of ordinary skill in the art to practice the '258 patent without undue experimentation. The wave index calculation as described by the '258 patent is set forth below.
In this regard, considering the waviness profile as a series of peaks and valleys, the smoothing rules of the program consider an inflection point to be a true peak or valley if it is: i) at least 100 micrometers away from the immediately preceding prior peak or valley and ii) at least 0.5 micrometer above or below the immediately preceding prior peak or valley, a valley being at least 0.5 micrometer below the immediately preceding prior peak. Pitch (P) is the distance between one valley and the next valley or in other words across the base of a peak. Average amplitude (H avg) and average pitch (P avg) are determined by the program for the smoothed trace of ten 12.5 mm tracing lengths (the second five lengths being 90° to the first five lengths). From the average of the averaged H’s and P’s, a WI value is computed from the equation: Wave Index (WI) = (H avg) x (P avg) where H avg and P avg are in microns.
’258 patent, col. 8, II. 3-19.
Crown asserted that according to the disclosed wave index “calculation,” one of ordinary skill in the pertinent art would not know whether to instruct the smoothing program to disregard a peak by comparing it to an immediately preceding peak, or to a valley. The district court held that common sense and the clarifying clause “a valley being at least 0.5 microme *1375 ter below the immediately preceding prior peak” defeated Crown’s argument. Thus, the district court held that the alleged grammatical ambiguities in the rules disclosed for calculating wave index did not invalidate the patent for lack of enablement.
Crown timely appealed the district court’s two orders, raising the issues of anticipation and obviousness of the '511 patent, and lack of enablement and written description of the '258 patent. We have jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1295(a)(1).
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
We review a district court’s grant of summary judgment without deference.
Atmel Corp. v. Info. Storage Devices, Inc.,
A patent is invalid for anticipation when the same device or method, having all of the elements contained in the claim limitations, is described in a single prior art reference.
Richardson v. Suzuki Motor Co.,
Obviousness is a legal conclusion based on underlying facts of four general types, all of which must be considered by the trier of fact: (1) the scope and content of the prior art; (2) the level of ordinary skill in the art; (3) the differences between the claimed invention and the prior art; and (4) any objective indicia of nonobviousness.
See Graham v. John Deere Co.,
“Determination of obviousness cannot be based on the hindsight combination of components selectively culled from the prior art to fit the parameters of the patented invention.”
ATD Corp. v. Lydall, Inc.,
The written description inquiry is a factual one and must be assessed on a case-by-case basis.
See Vas-Cath Inc. v. Mahurkar,
Whether a claim is enabled under 35 U.S.C. § 112, first paragraph is a question of law, although based upon underlying factual findings. See
PPG Indus., Inc. v. Guardian Indus. Corp.,
III. DISCUSSION
A. The '511 Patent
On appeal, Crown describes various purported errors in the district court’s analy *1377 sis of the validity of the '511 patent. Despite Crown’s contentions, we ascertain no error requiring reversal of the district court’s determination of validity over Crown’s claims of anticipation and obviousness.
Regarding alleged anticipation by the Gillery patent, on its face the Gillery patent does not disclose or discuss a two percent limitation for the reflectance contribution of the solar control film. Crown maintains that the '511 patent merely claims a preexisting property inherent in the structure disclosed in the prior art. Crown urges us to accept the proposition that if a prior art reference discloses the same structure as claimed by a patent, the resulting property, in this case, two percent solar control film reflectance, should be assumed. We decline to adopt this approach because this proposition is not in accordance with our cases on inherency. If the two percent reflectance limitation is inherently disclosed by the Gillery patent,
2
it must be necessarily present and a person of ordinary skill in the art would recognize its presеnce.
In re Robertson,
In arguing inherent disclosure of the two percent limitation in the Gillery patent, Crown bears an evidentiary burden to establish that the limitation was necessarily present.
3
The moving party in a summary judgment motion has the burden to show “that there is an absence of evidence to support the non-moving party’s case;” the non-moving party must affirmatively demonstrate by specific factual allegations that a genuine issue of material fact exists for trial.
Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
Crown also argues that the district court erred by comparing reflectance values in the Gillery patent to non-corresponding values in the '511 patent. August 22 Order at 23-24. While perhaps the district court could have been more careful to explain the basis of its comparison, on a close reading of the district court’s analysis we find that the alleged improper comparison only supported the district court’s primary point that no embodiment of the Gillery patent disclosed the two percent limitation, a conclusion that Crown has not shown to be in error.
Finally, Crown argues that various prior art references invalidate the '511 patent as obvious in view of such prior art. Crown’s arguments lack merit because it has not shown that the prior art contains a teaching, suggestion or motivation to reduce the reflectance contribution of the solar control film to “no more than about two percent,” and the district court properly concluded that there was no such teaching, suggestion or motivation in the prior art cited by Crown.
See Ruiz,
B. The '258 Patent
On appeal, Crown argues that the district court erred in analyzing the impact of the ambiguities in the wave index calculation on the enablement requirement for the '258 patent. In addition to its enablement attack, Crown also argues that the '258 patent does not meet the written description requirement of § 112, first paragraph.
The two requirements, while related and springing from the same factual predicates,
5
each carry a separate purpose. The purpose of the enablement requirement is to “ensure[ ] that the public
*1379
knowledge is enriched by the patent specification to a degree at least commensurate with the scope of the claims.”
Nat’l Recovery Techs., Inc. v. Magnetic Separation Sys.,
Turning to the enablement issue, we agree with Crown that the ambiguities and lack of specified boundary conditions, and Crown’s proffered evidence concerning the same, raise a genuine issue of material fact as to whether a person of ordinary skill in the pertinent art could make or use the invention of the '258 patent
7
without undue experimentation.
White Consol. Indus. v. Vega Servo-Control,
Following the reasoning of the district court, Solutia argues that a person of ordinary skill in the pertinent art could overcome any ambiguities in the wave index calculation without undue еxperimentation by testing a limited number of possibilities for computing the wave index. In response, Crown offers statements of its expert that the '258 patent does not define amplitude and that a person of ordinary skill in the art would not know whether to measure amplitude: (i) from a centerline running horizontally through the “middle” of the trace; (ii) from “peak-to-peak,”
i.e.,
from the bottom of a valley to the top of a peak; or (iii) from some other baseline or reference running horizontally somewhere through the trace. On its face, the '258 patent does not define amplitude. However, average amplitude directly impacts the wave index calculation becausе wave index
*1380
is the result of multiplying average amplitude by average pitch. Simply put, the wave index calculation would produce two separate numbers if calculated with a cen-terline versus a “peak-to-peak” amplitude. Worse yet, a range of various wave index values are possible for amplitude baselines running horizontally somewhere through the trace at various locations. To show that the wave index calculation is enabled, Solutia cites various details from the '258 patent concerning how to perform the test to generate a trace of the PVB surface to calculate wave index. However, Solutia does not presеnt sufficient evidence to rebut Crown’s demonstration of the amplitude ambiguity in the wave index calculation. This is so because: (i) the amplitude is a direct input to the critical claim limitation, a wave index of less than 15,000 square micrometers; and (ii) the novel aspects of the invention must be disclosed and not left to inference, that is, a patentee may not rely on the inference of a person of ordinary skill in the pertinent art to supply such novel aspects.
See Genentech Inc. v. Novo Nordisk A/S,
Compounding the amplitude ambiguity, Crown also notes that the wave index is the result of two independently varying, unbounded terms: average pitch and average amplitude. On its face, this does not seem to be a problem. However, Crown’s expert noted that because boundary conditions are not specified, the claim covers inoperative embodiments. For example, a wave index of 15,000 square micrometers results from an average height of 1000 micrometers multiplied by an average pitch of 15 micrometers. Yet, according to Crown’s expert, an average height of 1000 micrometers would not be acceptable for the PVB. As with the amplitude ambiguity, the problem goes well beyond this single example because a full range of resulting inoperative embodiments are possible for values of average height and average pitch that, when multiplied, produce a wave index value that meets the limitation of the claim. Such inoperative embodiments do not necessarily invalidate the claim.
See Atlas Powder Co. v. E.I. du Pont De Nemours & Co.,
Further compounding the ambiguities with the wave index rules, the '258 patent’s rules for determining which inflection points are “true” inflection points additionally support Crown’s argument that it has raised a genuine issue of material fact. Crown demonstrated in various ways through its experts and arguments the potential indeterminacy in the rules. Solu-tia’s expert admitted that there was some ambiguity in the rules with respect to whether a preceding peak or valley was the reference point in selecting a “true” peak or valley.
Solutia argues that even if the disclosed wave index calculation has ambiguities and is indeterminate, a person of ordinary skill in the pertinent art would be able to make and use the invention with some experimentation, but less than “undue” experimentation. Solutia argues that such a skilled person would only have to try two possibilities for amplitude, centerline and “peak-to-peak,” and that experimenting to discover which of two possibilities to use is well within the boundary of undue experimentation. Crown counters that the amplitude ambiguity and potential inoperative embodiments, combined with the ambiguities in the smoothing rules, seems to suggest a wide range of possibilities which one must try.
10
With this wide range of possibilities, we agree that Crown has raised a genuine issue of material fact as to the amount and type of experimentation required, facts that will determine whether such experimentation is undue.
See Enzo Biochem Inc., v. Calgene Inc.,
*1382 CONCLUSION
Because we hold that the '511 patent has not been shown to be invalid due to anticipation or obviousness and that a genuine issue of material fact exists with respect to facts underlying the determination of enablement for the '258 patent, we affirm-in-part and reverse-in-part the district court’s decision and remand for additional proceedings consistent with this opinion.
AFFIRMED-IN-PART, REVERSED-IN-PART, AND REMANDED.
COSTS
Each party bears its own costs.
Notes
. The district court, applying a similar analysis, also found that UK Patent Application GB 2 057 355 (the "UK patent”) did not anticipate the '511 patent because it did not have the two percent limitation.
. In order to claim “equivalent structure” between the Gillery patent and the '511 patent, Crown’s inherency argument rests on a precondition of its own making — that the Gil-lery patent discloses use of Ti02, even though it specifies TiOx, where x is greater than 1.0 but less than 2.0. Although Crown vigorously argues this point, we do not reach this issue because even if Crown is correct that the structures are equivalent, Crown's inherency argument fails for the reasons set forth herein.
. Crown’s reliance on
Pall Corp. v. Micron Separations, Inc.,
. As indicated by this Court’s questions at oral argument concerning the seemingly direct route to prove that the Gillery patent contains the two percent limitation implementing an embodiment of the Gillery patent and testing it this Court finds puzzling Crown’s reluctance regarding this approach to generate extrinsic proof that the Gillery patent inherently meets the two percent limitation.
. Also springing from these same underlying factual predicates is the § 112, second paragraph, definiteness requirement. This requirement is distinct from the enablement and description requirements, which arise from § 112, first paragraph.
[Djefiniteness and enablement are analytically distinct requirements, even though both concepts are contained in 35 U.S.C. § 112. The definiteness requirement of 35 U.S.C. § 112, ¶ 2 is a legal requirement, based on the court's role as construer of patent claims ... Definiteness requires the language of the claim to set forth clearly the domain over which the applicant seeks exclusive rights.... The test for whether a claim meets the definiteness requirement is "whether one skilled in the art would understand the bounds of the claim when read in light of the specification.”
Process Control Corp.,
. Based on the record before us, the written description issue has the following procedural posture: (i) Crown's Count VI of its amended complaint raised the written description issue; (ii) Solutia’s summary judgment motion argued that the '258 patent met the written description requirement; (iii) in opposition Crown argued that the written description requirement was not met; (iv) the district court did not dispose of the written description issue or discuss the issue in its opinion in a way that enables our review; and (v) Crown preserved the written description issue in its appeal to this court and thus has not waived its further adjudication on remand.
. All seventeen claims of the '258 patent refer to wave index, thus they all stand or fall together.
. The court in
In re Cook
further notes that a claim may be invalid if it reads on significant numbers of inoperative embodiments.
In re Cook,
. The inoperative embodiment inquiry informs the enablement inquiry; they are not the same inquiry.
Nat’l Recovery Techs.,
. We note that the specification for the '258 patent states that in the disclosed embodiment the wave index is calculated using a software program running on a personal computer being fed the trace line. '258 patent, col. 7, 11. 64-68. Undoubtedly, Solutia took care to ensure that the program contained the necessary boundary conditions and other information to calculate wave index to practice the invention. It appears, however, that Solutia took substantially less care in transcribing the information from the program into the specification's rules for calculating wave index. This incongruity will be relevant to the questiоn of enablement upon remand. See Chisum, § 7.03[4][e] at 7-86 & n. 77 ("A specification that claims an invention requiring implementation through computer software but fails to set forth the details of computer programming may present issues of whether the experimentation required to write the programming is reasonable or unreasonable.”) (summarizing the teachings of various cases).
.The Wands factors are:
(1) the quantity of experimentation necessary, (2) the amount of direction or guidance presented, (3) the presence or absence of working examples, (4) the nature of the invention, (5) the state of the prior art, (6) the relative skill of those in the art, (7) the predictability or unpredictability of the art, and (8) the breadth of the claims.
In re Wands,
