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).
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Printed, Flexible and Organic Electronics
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2015
25 May 2015

VTT sensor detects spoilage of food

VTT has developed a sensor that detects ethanol in the headspace of a food package.
24 May 2015

Printed and organic electronics in healthcare

Printed, organic and flexible electronics is an industry that includes various components and technologies, from relatively simple electrochemical sensors to flexible X-ray detectors. From an end-user's point of view, the main advantages are disposability, large area, and conformability. In this article we focus on healthcare and review the wide range of devices targeted for medical applications.
21 May 2015

IDTechEx: China's RFID market value will reach $4.3 billion by 2025

Not only will the use of RFID in China become a $4.3 billion market in 2025, but that figure will almost double if we include the value of tags and readers made in the country and exported elsewhere.
21 May 2015

Hexoskin

Carre Technologies Ltd (known increasingly by their product-line name, Hexoskin) are a Canadian company that make a sports shirt containing biometric sensors.
Included are:
20 May 2015

Scientists print low cost radio frequency antenna with graphene ink

Scientists have moved graphene a significant step along the path from lab bench novelty to commercially viable material for new electronic applications.
20 May 2015

Moth's eye and lotus leaf inspire solar panel coating

A moth's eye and lotus leaf were the inspirations for an antireflective water-repelling, or superhydrophobic, glass coating that holds significant potential for solar panels.
19 May 2015

Performance and durability combine in liquid crystal transistors

Researchers have designed a smectic liquid crystal that overcomes many of the challenges posed by organic field effect transistor materials.
18 May 2015

Carbon nanotubes quietly making a comeback?

Carbon nanotubes were the wonder material more than a decade ago. We think that multi-walled carbon nanotubes are being pulled out of the valley of despair thanks to a series of real applications in the conducting composite and energy storage sectors.
18 May 2015

Team to bring NFC to fight against global counterfeiting and piracy

Thin Film Electronics ASA has announced that its NFC products will be the first NFC-based solutions to be included in the World Customs Organization IPM anti-counterfeiting tool.
15 May 2015

E-skin and pocket-sized diagnostic machines give patients the power

Wearable E-skin that can measure heart rate and blood pressure, and paper diagnostic machines the size of a credit card that can give instant readings on blood and saliva samples.
13 May 2015

Body Motion Capturing from Bainisha: Video Interview

IDTechEx interview Bainisha at the IDTechEx Wearable Technology event
11 May 2015

Applied Graphene Materials interview at IDTechEx Graphene event

Video interview with Applied Graphene Materials
8 May 2015

Enfucell Printed Battery Powering Temperature Sensors and More...

Watch a video showing some of the latest products from Enfucell taken at the IDTechEx Printed Electronics Europe event.
7 May 2015

Molex acquires Soligie

Molex Incorporated, a global manufacturer of complete interconnect solutions, announced on 1st May 2015 that it has acquired certain assets of Soligie, Inc. Soligie specializes in printed and flexible electronic solutions for applications in medical, military, industrial, lighting and consumer goods.
6 May 2015

Highlights from Europe's Largest Event on Printed Electronics

By Raghu Das, CEO, IDTechEx - The 11th annual IDTechEx Printed Electronics Europe event in Berlin was a huge success thanks to our customers and partners, with attendees coming from 47 countries! This is the largest show on the topic in Europe and, more importantly, more adopters, OEMs and technology providers announced products and showed off their impressive solutions.
6 May 2015

Chemists cook up three atom-thick electronic sheets

Making thin films out of semiconducting materials is analogous to how ice grows on a windowpane: When the conditions are just right, the semiconductor grows in flat crystals that slowly fuse together, eventually forming a continuous film.
6 May 2015

Joanneum Research

Joanneum Research is a technology provider for business and industrial clients. They are made up of six research divisions which product IP which they can then license out to customers.
Included are:
5 May 2015

Highlights from Ericsson at the IDTechEx Show! in Berlin

Ericsson introduced "The power of touch" connecting people to all the object around them simply by touching it.
5 May 2015

Alta Devices

Alta Device is working on thin film GaAs solar cells. The company was founded in 2008 by professors Harry Atwater from Cal Tech and Eli Yablonovitch from Berkeley. In August of 2014, Alta Devices was acquired by Hanergy Holdings, Inc.
Included are:
5 May 2015

Dyesol

Dyesol was established in 2004 to commercialise a third generation photovoltaic nanotechnology called Dye Solar Cells (DSC) or Dye Sensitised Solar Cells (DSSC). The company is now working on perovskite PV cells--one of the emerging PV technologies with rapid efficiency growth.
Included are: