7 Feb 2014

EV Battery and Supercapacitor
Lessons from PE USA Supercapacitor Conference and Visits End 2013
1 Nov 2013

Supercapacitors USA 2013
There are just three weeks left until IDTechEx's Supercapacitors USA event in Santa Clara California, on November 20-21.
2 Aug 2013

Supercapacitors gain ascendancy
Life is good for supercapacitors manufacturers and developers.
25 Mar 2013

Revolutionary 'nuclear battery' a step closer
Experts in nuclear physics have helped develop research towards a 'nuclear battery', which could revolutionise the concept of portable power by packing in up to a million times more energy compared to a conventional battery.
9 Nov 2011

Breakthrough in low loss high frequency carbon nanotube electronics
A collaboration between researchers at the University of Surrey's Advanced Technology Institute and the Faculty of Mechatronics of Warsaw University of Technology in Poland reports that low electrical loss at frequencies of up to 220 GHz are possible in screen printed carbon nanotube - polymer composites. Producing such low electrical loss materials potentially opens up new types of high frequency large area electronic devices.
2 Oct 2009

Updates on Photovoltaics at Printed Electronics Asia
The photovoltaics track on the second day of Printed Electronics Asia 2009 commenced with photovoltaics market forecasts for thin film technologies by IDTechEx chairman Dr Peter Harrop.
22 Apr 2009

Notes on Electrochemical Energy Storage meeting London 21 April
This one day meeting at the Institute of Engineering and Technology in London was staged jointly with the Royal Society of Chemistry. Here we report on two of the lectures which concerned devices that will increasingly interface with energy harvesting - rechargeable batteries and supercapacitors.
11 Jan 2008

Enhancement of polymer luminescence from multi-walled carbon nanotubes
Organic based solution processable devices may revolutionise the lighting and photovoltaic industries of the future.
21 Dec 2007

UK Physicists use plastics to detect radiation
In applications ranging from hospital X-ray machines to instruments for astronomy, the standard way to measure the dose of radiation is to use a detector made from an inorganic semiconductor, such as silicon.