
Building on Air: The International Industrial Gases Industry, 1886–2006
Cambridge University Press, 10/20/2015
EAN 9781107033122, ISBN10: 1107033128
Hardcover, 479 pages, 23.5 x 16 x 3.3 cm
Language: English
The industrial gases industry originated in 1886, when a London-based company began producing high-purity oxygen. Initially, purified oxygen was a solution in search of a problem, but demand for it soared early in the twentieth century with the emergence of welding technology. By then, dramatic technological improvements in air separation and purification had emerged, as had most key firms dominating the industry today. Building on air in the decades that followed, the firms expanded their product range and geographical reach to create applications that were essential to every manufacturing process in the modern world, from semiconductor production to oil refining, waste water treatment, and steel-making. This is the first scholarly history of this vital but invisible industry from its origins to the present. Based on unparalleled access to company and public archives, the book explores business and technological development, industrial evolution, and the industry's local roots and international and global reach.
Introduction
Part I. Defining an Industry, 1886–1914
1. From oxygen to industry
2. Competition and cooperation in expanding markets to 1914
Part II. Seeking Equilibrium in an Age of Turbulence, 1914–60
3. Strategy and structure
from the Great War to the 1930s
4. The Great Depression, the Second World War, and the industrial gases industry
5. Reinventing the industry starting in the 1950s
Part III. Mass Production, Specialization, and Internationalization, 1960–80
6. Internationalization of the industry
the UK and the European continent in the 1960s and 1970s
7. Internationalization of the industry
the US market and the re-entry of the Europeans in the 1970s
8. Broadening the stage
Part IV. Concentration, Consolidation, and Competition, 1980–2006
9. Contested markets and industry challenges in the 1980s
10. Globalization and growth through the turn of the twenty-first century
Conclusions.