The specialty gas field keeps growing, and the more that happens, the more it needs to happen.
Along with medical or air gases, the specialty and rare gas fields are essential for research and development across a range of scientific and commercial applications. As Mark Cohen, Specialty Gas Product Manager for Connecticut-based Tech Air, puts it, “Technology is ever changing. Equipment manufacturers are consistently improving their products to deliver lower detection limits and higher efficiency.”
This, of course, is just the beginning. Along with corporate research, academic and other scientific development hinges on the availability of quality, pure specialty gases in environments where, University researchers are competing for dwindling grant money and budgetary restrictions, and state and federal codes are adapting to changing political climates. The challenges would seem to speak for themselves.
... to continue reading you must be subscribed