Organizational Scope and Innovation Performance: Evidence from the US Semiconductor Industry

2014 ◽  
Vol 2014 (1) ◽  
pp. 12096
Author(s):  
Nandini Lahiri ◽  
Carmen Weigelt
1994 ◽  
Vol 344 ◽  
Author(s):  
Steven J. Hardwick ◽  
Joanne C. Mailloux

AbstractThe US semiconductor industry uses 5–7 thousand pounds of arsine annually. Fifty to eighty percent of the arsine used becomes a waste product, which requires abatement. Traditional methods of abatement are reviewed with an emphasis on dry chemical scrubbing. A variety of dry chemical scrubbing materials were evaluated for arsine capacity, using activated carbon as the baseline for comparison. A proprietary mixed oxide composition, employing copper oxide as the active ingredient was identified as having high capacity and efficiency. Disposal and possible reclamation options are discussed.


Author(s):  
Moreno Bonaventura ◽  
Luca Maria Aiello ◽  
Daniele Quercia ◽  
Vito Latora

AbstractWhile great emphasis has been placed on the role of social interactions as a driver of innovation growth, very few empirical studies have explicitly investigated the impact of social network structures on the innovation performance of cities. Past research has mostly explored scaling laws of socio-economic outputs of cities as determined by, for example, the single predictor of population. Here, by drawing on a publicly available dataset of the startup ecosystem, we build the first Workforce Mobility Network among metropolitan areas in the US. We found that node centrality computed on this network accounts for most of the variability observed in cities’ innovation performance and significantly outperforms other predictors such as population size or density, suggesting that policies and initiatives aiming at sustaining innovation processes might benefit from fostering professional networks alongside other economic or systemic incentives. As opposed to previous approaches powered by census data, our model can be updated in real-time upon open databases, opening up new opportunities both for researchers in a variety of disciplines to study urban economies in new ways, and for practitioners to design tools for monitoring such economies in real-time.


Significance It has evolved from US complaints about Chinese intellectual property and technology transfer practices into a broad-spectrum effort to paralyse the further technological and commercial development of Chinese technology firms, and decouple the US and Chinese IT sectors. Its focus has expanded to include the semiconductor chip industry. Impacts Businesses throughout the semiconductor industry worldwide are becoming caught up in a geopolitical clash. The semiconductor trade shows how a once apolitical sector can quickly become politicised, much as medical equipment has been amid COVID-19. China will seek continued access to non-US foreign technologies through regulation of foreign firms within China. To succeed, China’s semiconductor development projects will need to reduce waste and coordinate their efforts better.


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