
Printed Electronics Sensors & Sound
Latest Articles
E coli sensors using silk (15 Aug)
Researchers at Georgia Tech in Atlanta, have made electronic biosensors that identify bacteria in poultry plants.
some of the most compelling areas of future application involve the intimate, conformal integration of electronics with the human body in ways that are inconceivable using established technology.
Researchers have found a simple way to uniformly deposit between one and five layers of graphene to create transistors and proof-of concept electrodes for organic photovoltaics.
Printed electronics today is mainly a matter of inorganic rather than organic chemistry and the next ten years are unlikely to see the inorganic part drop below 50% of the high value materials required.
ESL acknowledges the plastic electronics revolution on flexible substrates is here to stay and will meet their customers' challenges with off-the-shelf products, and with the development of proprietary or custom formulations.Show all articles for Sensors & Sound sorted by Date | Popularity





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