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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2009
10 Apr 2009

Trade & Invest Receives Printed Electronics Champion Award

For its success in helping investors set up offices and manufacturing facilities in Germany, Germany Trade & Invest has been recognized for its contribution to the printed electronics industry with the "Printed Electronics Champion" award.
9 Apr 2009

Smart loudspeaker substrate for printed electronics

A lightweight, flexible loudspeaker that looks like a thick sheet of foil could signal the beginning of the end for conventional speakers in some applications.
8 Apr 2009

Needs and Requirements for Barrier Layers for Flexible Electronics - The Big Opportunity

IDTechEx, United Kingdom
8 Apr 2009

Printed Electronics; Weird Stuff: How people might come to use, hate, break, or love it

Fraunhofer FIT, Germany
8 Apr 2009

Printing Conductive Structures on Textiles and Membranes

TNO Science and Industry, Netherlands
8 Apr 2009

Ultra Low-Cost Printed Electric Tag Technology is Ready for the Market

VTT, Finland
8 Apr 2009

Barrier Solutions and Printed Electrodes for Flexible Electronics

Alcan Packaging, Germany
8 Apr 2009

Wearable Electronic Solutions - mystic, challenging or reality explained at the first telecommunication glove G-cell and power heating

TEXSYS, Germany
8 Apr 2009

Breakthroughs in Barrier Materials for Flexible Electronics

ITRI, Taiwan
8 Apr 2009

Printed RFID and more for New Applications

PolyIC, Germany
8 Apr 2009

Smart Wearable Systems: Trends and Challenges

Philips Applied Technologies, Netherlands
8 Apr 2009

An Innovative Combination of SMART RFID and MEMS Sensor - A Leading edge product for transport monitoring in the logistic

Memsfab, Germany
8 Apr 2009

An Innovative Combination of SMART RFID and MEMS Sensor - A Leading edge product for transport monitoring in the logistic

KSW Microtec, Germany
8 Apr 2009

Current Approaches to Bridge the Gap Between Electronics and Fabrics

Sefar - Filtration Solutions, Switzerland
8 Apr 2009

An Innovative Combination of SMART RFID and MEMS Sensor - A Leading edge product for transport monitoring in the logistic

DB Schenker, Germany
8 Apr 2009

Volume Manufacturing of Printed Rewritable Memories

Thin Film Electronics AB, Sweden
8 Apr 2009

Roll to Roll Coating for Photovoltaics

Risø National Laboratory, Denmark
8 Apr 2009

Wearable Electronics and Applications

Embedded Systems Lab of University Passau, Germany
8 Apr 2009

High Efficiency OLEDs for Lighting Applications

Novaled, Germany
8 Apr 2009

Inkjet as a Digital Fabrication Process for Photovoltaics Applications

Imaging Technology International (iTi), United States