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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2007
13 Jun 2007

Inorganic Printed Electronics - The Great Opportunity

The future $300 billion market for printed electronics is emerging via thin film electronics. The contribution of organic materials to this is greatly publicized but the best devices being developed usually rely on inorganic or combined inorganic/organic technology. The more select groups developing these inorganic materials and devices have a great future. IDTechEx has published the first study on Inorganic Printed and Thin Film Electronics. Here Dr Peter Harrop summarises some of the findings.
13 Jun 2007

Toshiba Matsushita Claims World's Largest OLED Display

12 Jun 2007

New Form of Organic Photovoltaics

12 Jun 2007

Printed Electronics Awards USA 2007 - Open for Submissions

Recognizing Innovation. Success. Development.
11 Jun 2007

Printed Electronics in India

8 Jun 2007

Flexible Electronics Pilot Lab and New Electronic Paper in Taiwan

7 Jun 2007

But Edison's Lights Are Still Working

6 Jun 2007

Taiwan Prioritise OLEDs for the Future

6 Jun 2007

How to Eat RFID

6 Jun 2007

PolyIC Demonstrate Organic 64 bit Memory RFID tag

5 Jun 2007

Tohoku University Japan Advances Organic and Inorganic Semiconductors

5 Jun 2007

New Bendable AMOLED From Sony

4 Jun 2007

Chinese Universities Progress OLED Lighting and Displays

4 Jun 2007

Semiconductor Energy Laboratory Japan - World Record Breaker

4 Jun 2007

Augsberg University Calculate When Our Materials Run Out - Soon

1 Jun 2007

Surge in Matsushita Patents

31 May 2007

Rapid Advances in OLEDs in East Asia

31 May 2007

Honda on Target for Production of Inorganic Compound Photovoltaics

30 May 2007

Largest Printed Semiconductor Photodetector Array

30 May 2007

Flexible Electrophoretic Displays from Polymer Vision and PVI