Printed, Flexible and Organic Electronics

Printed, Flexible and Organic Electronics

Printed Electronics, being thin film silicon or inorganic or organic semiconductors, can be used to form Thin Film Transistor Circuits (TFTCs), such as replacing the functionality of simple silicon chips. TFTCs also employ thin film conductors and dielectrics and the ultimate objective is to make many different components at the same time - such as displays, batteries, sensors, microphones etc using the same materials or at least the same deposition techniques thus saving cost and improving reliability. Some TFTCs will be capable of covering large areas to affordably form electronic billboards, smart shelves and so on. They will be lightweight, rugged and mechanically flexible. Often they will be made by rapid, high-volume reel-to-reel processing even forming a part of regular printing processes for graphics. These circuits will be cheap enough to permit electronics where envisaged silicon chips are always or almost always too expensive, where multiple components and needed, and where silicon is impracticle (e.g. not flexible, brittle, thick etc).
Filtered by:
Printed, Flexible and Organic Electronics
Company
Topic
Show
 
2013
21 Nov 2013

A New R2R Manufacturing Concept for Printed Electronics

VDL Enabling Technologies Group, Netherlands
21 Nov 2013

Capability Assessment of Combining 3D Printing (FDM) and Printed Electronics (Aerosol Jet) to Produce Fully Printed Functionalized Devices

Optomec, United States
21 Nov 2013

Flexible Glass Enabling Advanced Product Applications and Next Generation Manufacturing

Corning Incorporated, United States
21 Nov 2013

Stretchable Transparent Electrodes using Graphene-metal Nanowire Hybrid Structures

Ulsan National Institute of Science and Technology, Korea
21 Nov 2013

Lossless Mechanical Interpolation for Cost Effective and Continuously Tile-able Surface Sensing via Flexible Printed Electronics

Tactonic Technologies, United States
21 Nov 2013

3D Printing With Embedded Electronics

Rochester Institute of Technology, United States
21 Nov 2013

Printed Electronics Applications for Mobile Devices

Optomec Inc, United States
21 Nov 2013

Heavy Metal Free Quantum Dots for Displays, Lighting and Solar Applications

Nanoco Technologies Ltd, United States
21 Nov 2013

DPP, the paradigm shift in manufacturing flexible RFID antennas and other PCBs

DP Patterning AB, Sweden
21 Nov 2013

Optoelectronic Solutions for OLEDs

Cynora GmbH, Germany
21 Nov 2013

Batteries and 3D Printing

Harvard University, United States
21 Nov 2013

Applications of Photonic Curing, and Enabled Materials

NovaCentrix, United States
21 Nov 2013

Transparent Metal Grid Electrodes for Touch Screen Displays and OLED Lighting

Rolith, Inc.United States
21 Nov 2013

Wearable Electrochemical Sensors based on Printable Electronics

University of California San Diego, United States
21 Nov 2013

3D Printed Bionic Nanomaterials

Princeton University, United States
21 Nov 2013

Soluble Systems - Closing the Gap with Evaporable OLED Materials

EMD Chemicals, United States
21 Nov 2013

Towards a Workflow and Tools Dedicated to Inkjet for Printed Electronics

Ceradrop, France
21 Nov 2013

OrgaconGrid - Strategies Towards More Transparent And Higher Conductivity Flexible Electrodes

Agfa-Materials, Belgium
21 Nov 2013

When Printed Electronics meet Design and Usages for Highly Innovative Functionalities

ISORG, France
21 Nov 2013

SpiderFab: Enabling Self-Fabricating Spacecraft Using Additive Manufacturing

Tethers Unlimited, United States