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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2020
7 Jul 2020

Join the IDTechEx webinar 9th July - Where Are Opportunities in 5G

This webinar will help to clarify the real market opportunities for 5G from different perspectives, including: User equipment adoption, 5G station deployment, Active antennas, New trend in RF components, Materials challenges,and Emerging use cases
7 Jul 2020

Researchers Print, Tune Graphene Sensors to Monitor Food Freshness

Researchers dipped their new, printed sensors into tuna broth and watched the readings. It turned out the sensors - printed with high-resolution aerosol jet printers on a flexible polymer film and tuned to test for histamine, an allergen and indicator of spoiled fish and meat - can detect histamine down to 3.41 parts per million.
5 Jul 2020

Kyocera

Kyocera: mixed nano/micro pressure-less sintering die attach paste
3 Jul 2020

TRAQC

TRAQC is a Montreal-based start-up company that specializes in non-destructive and inline quality control for printed electronics. More specifically, their technology uses terahertz radiation to measure the conductivity of specifically patterned test regions.
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3 Jul 2020

Liquid X Receives OEKO-TEX Standard 100 Certification for Textiles

Liquid X, an advanced manufacturer of functional metallic inks with engineering design and prototype-to-production manufacturing capabilities, announced that its proprietary, particle-free silver ink used to create e-textiles and other functional textiles has received the OEKO-TEX Standard 100 Certification.
2 Jul 2020

Synergies and sensors used in the water industry

Sensors in the water and wastewater treatment industries are an emerging technology market area, forecast to grow to $2Bn+ in 2030. This market uses synergies with sensors which are currently used in a number of different markets. This article discusses some of these key synergies.
2 Jul 2020

Innovation Challenges Regular Touchscreens With New Spray-on Technique

Researchers have challenged the idea that touchscreens are limited to 2D and rectangular shapes by developing an interactive display that can be sprayed in any shape.
1 Jul 2020

Mitsubishi Materials

Mitsubishi Materials: low temperature die attach Ag conductive paste
1 Jul 2020

Artificial Skin Heals Wounds and Makes Robots Sweat

A smart surface that can actively and repeatedly release and reabsorb substances by environmental stimuli.
30 Jun 2020

Sensors: The Whole Picture - 5c Analysis by parameters measured: S-Z

Sensors: The Whole Picture Part 5c: Analysis by parameters measured: S-Z
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30 Jun 2020

Sensors: The Whole Picture - 5b: Analysis by parameters measured: I-R

Sensors: The Whole Picture Part 5b: Analysis by parameters measured: I-R
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30 Jun 2020

Sensors: The Whole Picture - 5a Analysis by parameters measured: A-H

Sensors: the Whole Picture Part 5a Analysis by parameters measured: A-H
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30 Jun 2020

Conductive Inks: Finding the Right Segment in a Diverse $2.3B Market

The conductive ink market is diverse. This is shown in the schematic below, showing the commercialization status of diverse spectrum applications. This diversity is both a blessing and a curse.
30 Jun 2020

Critical Communications Component Made on a Flexible Wooden Film

In the not-too-distant future, flexible electronics will open the door to new products like foldable phones, tablets that can be rolled, paper-thin displays and wearable sensors that monitor health data. Developing these new bendy products, however, means using materials like new plastics and thin films to replace the rigid circuit boards and bulky electronic components that currently occupy the interiors of cell phones and other gadgets.
29 Jun 2020

Emissive QLED: the ultimate display technology?

In this article we discuss emissive QDs. This is potentially the ultimate display technology since it can offer printability, ultra-narrow FWHM and thus ultranarrow color gamut, high efficacy, etc. The challenges are however many, and the technology roadmap is long.
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29 Jun 2020

Graphene Smart Textiles Developed for Heat Adaptive Clothing

New research on the two-dimensional material graphene has allowed researchers to create smart adaptive clothing which can lower the body temperature of the wearer in hot climates.
26 Jun 2020

Voxel8

Voxel8 has pivoted from offering 3D printed electronics to 3D printing footware.
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26 Jun 2020

SIJ Technology

SIJ Technology make super fine inkjet printers, capable of feature sizes as small as 1 um. They also produce a spray-coater for coating 3D surfaces.
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26 Jun 2020

Printed Organic Sensor Smart Mat for Social Distancing in Retail

InnovationLab announced its innovative "smart mat," a sensor-based distance-control floor mat that helps to ensure social distancing in retail outlets.
26 Jun 2020

Ynvisible Expands Its Printed Electrochromics Offering

Ynvisible Interactive Inc has entered into a non-exclusive licensing agreement with RISE Research Institutes of Sweden. The license agreement covers RISE's intellectual property rights for printed electrochromic displays and related inks.