RAE Systems explained

RAE Systems
Founder:Robert I. Chen, Peter Hsi
Location City:San Jose, California
Location Country:U.S.
Area Served:World Wide
Type:Subsidiary
Industry:Gas detection systems, Industrial, Oil & Gas, Fire/HazMat Safety equipment
Products:Wireless personal, area, transportable and fixed gas and radiation detection systems
Homepage:www.raesystems.com
Parent:Honeywell

RAE Systems, Inc., or RAE System by Honeywell, is a provider of wireless, gas and radiation detection instruments and systems that enable real-time safety and security threat detection to help mitigate risk, and protect workers, contractors, the public, and assets.[1] [2] RAE Systems is located in San Jose, California.[1] The company was founded in 1991 by Robert I. Chen and Peter Hsi.[3]

The company's competitors include Ion Science Ltd, Mine Safety Appliances, Industrial Scientific Corporation, and Dräger.[4] Some of its customers include BP, Chevron Corporation, and Total Petroleum in the energy sector; United States Air Force, United States Navy, and United States Department of Homeland Security in the government sector; DuPont and Formosa Plastics Corp in other industry sectors.[5]

History

Robert I. Chen and Peter Hsi founded RAE Systems in 1991 to apply sensor technology to monitor toxic chemicals for environmental, industrial safety, energy, hazardous material (HazMat), emergency response, and government applications.[3] The co-founders started the company after selling Applied Optoelectronic Technology Corporation, a manufacturer of computer-aided test systems, to Hewlett-Packard.[3]

In 2013, the company's detectors were used in 120 countries by industrial organizations, emergency responders, and government agencies.[5] In April 2013, the company was acquired by Honeywell.[6]

Technology

The company holds over 40 chemical sensor patents in the detection-sensor field, which include patents for photoionization, wireless, and radiation technologies.[5] [7] The company's offerings include wirelessly-enabled technologies for emergency response, national security, CBRNE agent detection, fire, and military end user applications.[3] Also, the company has products for real-time detection of unseen threats such as radiation, chemical warfare agents (CWA), and toxic and combustible gases.[5] [7]

With its photoionization technology, the company provides photoionization detector (PID) that can help safety professionals monitor and measure volatile organic compounds (VOCs),[8] combustible gases and vapors, and toxic gases.[9] With its wireless and radiation technologies, the company developed portable devices that are able to detect low-level radiation in real-time, as well as dosimeters that can detect dose rates and help protect industrial workers from radiation exposure.[9] RAE Systems wireless gas detection systems enable incident commanders to extend monitoring capabilities and share critical data in real time as emergencies unfold.[10]

The company also incorporates wireless communication and data transmission capabilities into its offerings.[11] In 2001, RAE Systems introduced its first wireless data transmission product. In the first quarter of 2012, the ProRAE Guardian was launched, enabling access to real-time data on toxic gases and radiation, combined with the physiological status and location of workers and emergency response teams.[12] In January 2012, the company released its cloud-based service, called ProRAE Guardian CloudServer, for first responders to detect hazardous threats in real-time and to share gas and radiation data globally.[10] [13] This service helps emergency response teams shorten the time to analyze threats and make decisions.[14]

Industries

The company serves five industries, including energy exploration and refining/oil and gas, industrial safety, national security, fire and HazMat, and the environmental market.[1] [3]

The energy exploration and refining/oil and gas industry need process measurements and safety warning systems to deal with global industrial accidents, such as the 2010 catastrophic explosion of the Deepwater Horizon oil rig, and Total's Elgin platform gas leak that took place in March 2012.[15] The company's monitors are utilized by energy companies for exploration, refining as well as downstream monitoring and safety.[3]

In the industrial safety market, there is an increasing awareness that long-term exposure to even very low concentrations of toxic or hazardous gases can adversely affect workers’ health. Companies and organizations need constant monitoring and detection solutions to measure the acceptable level of toxic gas exposure to personnel.[5]

In the oil and gas, industrial production, fire and HazMat, national security, and environmental industries, the company's products are deployed by first responders to improve public protection and reduce response times.[10]

In addition, the company's solutions, such as its AreaRAE wireless monitoring system, are used for risk mitigation, asset protection and worker safety by global organizations and sports venues such as the Super Bowl, World Series games, NBA championship, as well as Government conventions.[11] [16] The company's sensors were also deployed at the London 2012 Olympics and other international table tennis tournaments, where the International Table Tennis Federation (ITFF) asked RAE Systems to provide sensors to test paddles.[17]

Notes and References

  1. Lisa Sibley, Silicon Valley Business Journal. "RAE Systems names Agilent's Chris Toney as COO." April 10, 2012, Retrieved February 12, 2013.
  2. Rachael King, CIO Journal. "Cloud Services Drive Fast-Growing Outsourcing Market." August 15, 2012, Retrieved March 27, 2013.
  3. The Wall Street Transcript. "Robert I. Chen." December 3, 2007. Retrieved January 29, 2013.
  4. Wikinvest. "RAE Systems (RAE) competition ." Retrieved Apr 26, 2013.
  5. AZOSensors. "RAE Systems Receives Frost & Sullivan Global Leadership Award for Gas Detection." March 29, 2013. Retrieved April 3, 2013.
  6. Cromwell Schubarth, Silicon Valley Business Journal. "Honeywell buys RAE Systems for $340M." Apr 23, 2013. Retrieved June 12, 2013.
  7. Bulk Inside. "RAE Systems." Retrieved February 12, 2013.
  8. T. L. Longworth K. Y. Ong (Sep, 2001). Domestic Preparedness Program: Testing of RAE Systems ppbRAE Volatile Organic Compound (VOC) Monitor Photo-Ionization Detector (PID) Against Chemical Warfare Agents Summary Report.
  9. BusinessWeek. "Company Overview." Retrieved February 12, 2013.
  10. Stew Magnuson, National Defense. "Chemical, Biological Detectors to Improve First Responder Reaction." June 2012, Retrieved January 29, 2013.
  11. Jerry Laws, Occupational Health & Safety. "Wireless Detectors Aiding Emergency Responders." January 1, 2012. Retrieved Apr 26, 2013.
  12. Fire Engineering. "RAE Systems Offers the ProRAE Guardian at FDIC 2012." April 21, 2012. Retrieved March 27, 2013.
  13. Fire Engineering. "RAE Systems Software Enables Interoperability Among Responders." October 28, 2011. Retrieved March 27, 2013.
  14. Oil, Gas & Petrochem Equipment. "Multi-remote real-time detection, data sharing: gas and radiation." January 31, 2013. Retrieved March 27, 2013.
  15. Karolin Schaps and Muriel Boselli, Reuters. "Total plans to fly staff to gas-leaking North Sea platform." April 1, 2012. Retrieved March 18, 2013.
  16. Tactical Defense Media. "CST & CBRNE Source Book." June 2010. Retrieved March 18, 2013.
  17. Ben Woods, ZDNet. "Ping-pong detectives: RAE Systems called in to find Olympics 'paddle doping' cheats." August 9, 2012. Retrieved March 27, 2013.