Masterclasses
These twenty one optional expert-led masterclasses are interactive consultancy sessions that will provide you with a clear picture of the complex technology and market segments covered. They will ensure that you get the most from the conference and tradeshow by arming you with the latest progress and perspective on the topic, saving you extensive time in mapping the industry yourself.
Relevant samples and products will be shown at each masterclass, in addition to the presentations being distributed in printed and electronic formats. Masterclasses are delivered by impartial analysts and subject matter experts that have extensively studied the topic, so that you leave with answers to your questions.
Additionally
1-to-1 time with an IDTechEx analyst is available to masterclass attendees. Email c.jennings@IDTechEx.com to book your slot.
Monday, 27 April 2015
Morning session - 9.00am to 12.00 noon
(Please choose one class only)
Afternoon session - 2.30pm to 5.30pm
(Please choose one class only)
Thursday, 30 April 2015
Morning session - 9.00am to 12.00 noon
(Please choose one class only)
Afternoon session - 2.30pm to 5.30pm
(Please choose one class only)
27 April 2015 - Morning Sessions
1
Introduction to Printed Electronics
Raghu Das CEO IDTechEx |
Dr Xiaoxi He Technology Analyst IDTechEx |
Joao De Oliveira - PragmatIC Printing Limited |
Designed for those who are new to this disruptive technology or who need to understand the big picture to assess the challenges and opportunities, this masterclass will arm you with the latest knowledge of the applications and technology developments involving printed electronics. The class will cover:
Market Appraisal
- Actual uses of printed electronics so far
- Trends by territory
- Value and supply chain and market drivers
- Current market size and future market opportunity, with 10 year forecasts to 2025
Technology Appraisal
Analysts will cover how each of the following technology options work; the advantages and disadvantages of each; 10 year forecasts; case studies; suppliers; costs; technical and market challenges and opportunities:
- Displays (OLEDs, electrophoretic, electroluminescent, electrochromic)
- OLED lighting
- Thin film transistor circuits (organic, inorganic semiconductors, thin film silicon)
- Sensors
- Conductive inks
- Batteries and actuators
- Photovoltaics
Manufacturing
- A review of manufacturing technologies
This masterclass provides you with a full assessment of this complex and rapidly changing technology from analysts that have studied the topic since 2002. Samples of printed electronics components and products will be shown.
» Register for the masterclass
2
Introduction to Energy Harvesting
Dr Peter Harrop Chairman IDTechEx |
Dr Mazhar Bari, CEO, STREP Stefan Ikelman - Business Development Manager, Marlow Industries |
Energy harvesting is the process by which ambient energy is captured and converted into electricity for small autonomous devices making them self-sufficient. It will create a $2.6 billion market ten years from now. The introductory masterclass focusses on the different energy harvesting options, their construction, combinations, alternatives and future. Specifically, the masterclass will cover:
Market Appraisal
- Market drivers and needs by application
- Value chain and system components
- Trends by territory and unmet opportunities
- Current market size and future market opportunity, with 10 year forecasts to 2025 by application
Technology Appraisal
Analysts will cover how each of the following technology options work; materials used and manufacturing processes; the advantages and disadvantages of each; applications; case studies; suppliers; costs; technical and market challenges and opportunities:
- Electrodynamic energy harvesting
- Thermoelectric energy harvesting
- Piezoelectric energy harvesting
- Photovoltaic energy harvesting
- RF energy harvesting
- Other applicable forms of energy harvesting
The broad range of applications will be covered, from wind-up medical instruments in Africa to regenerative soaring and landing of aircraft and regenerative braking of cars and trains to powering wireless sensors and switches. This masterclass identifies and compares important parameters, reveals trends such as that to multi-mode harvesting, harvesting-tolerant lower-power chips and electrics and reducing cost and size. When will automotive thermoelectric generators, woven photovoltaics, printed organic photovoltaics and more succeed? Who is working on these things and what is their progress? IDTechEx addresses how harvesting is essential for the Internet of Things, future healthcare and wearable electronics and the barriers as to why it is not used in more consumer electronics devices today and the opportunities ahead.
» Register for the masterclass
3
Wearable Electronics
Dr Guillaume Chansin Senior Technology Analyst IDTechEx |
James Hayward Technology Analyst IDTechEx |
Keith Churches - Head of Innovation Services, Flextronics |
Wearable technologies has become the new hot topic. Indeed, it is estimated that the total addressable market will grow to $70 billion in the next decade. But while many are targeting healthcare applications, few have actually succeeded. In this context, it is necessary to have a critical look at the market trends, and to assess what it means in terms of growth and profitability.
On the technology side, most of the existing products leverage the components that have been developed over the years for the mobile phone industry. However, there are exciting new technologies coming up, from flexible displays to biometric sensors. This session will introduce the new materials and technologies that will enable future wearable devices.
This session will cover:
- The current range of wearable electronic products
- Applications in healthcare and infotainment
- Risks and challenges
- The key enabling technologies for next-gen devices
- Potential market size and opportunities
» Register for the masterclass
4
Organic Materials
Dr Khasha Ghaffarzadeh Head of Consulting IDTechEx |
Poopathy Kathirgamanathan - Chair in Electronic Materials Engineering, Brunel University London Dr Georgos Laptsis, CYNORA GmbH Dr Karl Cowley - SmartKem Dr Christian Nielsen - Imperial College London |
Considerable investment and development has been made in a wide range of highly functionalized materials which have enabled completely new electrical and electronic components - from OLED displays to flexible photovoltaics. Investors are attracted by the high value, high margin and high volume opportunities possible. However, the current and emerging set of material options are very complex - highly specialized chemistries and performance/scale-up/cost trade-offs, in addition to an increasingly crowded IP landscape. This session provides a clear picture as to what is going and the market opportunities.
Materials Covered
- Organic (small molecule and polymer)
- Carbon nanotubes
- Graphene
- Metal oxides
- Nano silicon
- Other highly functionalized materials
Market and Technology Assessment
For each material above, the following will be assessed:
- Historic development, current state-of-art and development focus and future potential
- Current material performance and desired material performance by application
- Material deposition options and relative costs
- Material opportunity in key applications including displays, lighting, transistor circuits, memory, photovoltaics, sensors and energy storage
- Key suppliers
This session is based on IDTechEx research conducted on advanced functional materials since 1999, in addition to world class academic experts.
» Register for the masterclass
5
Energy Storage: Supercapacitors
Franco Gonzalez Senior Technology Analyst IDTechEx |
Dr Andrew Burke - Research Engineer, Inst. of Transportation Studies, UC Davis Elzbieta Frackowiak - Poznan University of Technology Stephen Voller - Zapgocharger Ltd |
Energy storage technologies are the key stone of the future of sustainable energy systems. Supercapacitors are an emerging energy storage technology with exceptional high power characteristics and longer useful lifetimes than mainstream energy storage technologies such as lithium batteries. The development of this technology has been progressing at a faster rate in the last 10 years. The transport industry is using them in trains, electric buses and cars. Smartphones may have supercapacitors in the near future in order to improve their energy efficiency and so on.
This masterclass will give you all the knowledge you need to understand this emerging technology, its market potential and its role in the energy storage space.
We will lead you from the basic technical concepts up to the most recent technology developments in the area and to understand applications in different industries.
Join us as we dive into this exciting emerging technology.
This masterclass will cover:
- Introduction to supercapacitor technology and its position in the energy storage space
- Performance parameters of supercapacitors
- Performance benchmark of supercapacitors commercially available and under development
- Technology development pathways for increasing performance of supercapacitor technology
- Graphene and CNT progress in supercapacitors
- The role of electrolytes in performance
- Environmentally friendlier materials
- Supercapacitor manufacturing
- Current and emerging applications in the automotive, industrial, electronics and other industries
- Progress on industry standardisation
- Supercapacitors market forecast 2015-2025
» Register for the masterclass
6
Introduction to 3D Printing.
Rachel Gordon Technology Analyst IDTechEx |
Dr Ben Jastram - 3D Labor |
This masterclass will take place at the 3D Laboratory at the Technical University of Berlin and will also include a tour.
For ten years the 3D laboratory at the Technical University of Berlin has been developing applications in the fields of 3D scan, 3D print and 3D immersive (interactive) projection. The applications originate in many application fields like mathematics and natural sciences, engineering sciences, medicine and medical technologies, geo sciences, archaeology, palaeontology, architecture, arts and design, museums etc. The 3D laboratory cooperates with research and other public institutions like museums as well as - mainly small and medium - companies. Last but not least the laboratory contributes to the university teaching and provides knowledge transfer to its cooperation partners.
The tour will consist of showing the equipment of the 3D laboratory and some applications:
- demonstration of different 3D printing technologies
- fused deposition modeling (synthetic material - ABS)
- powder based printing (gypsum)
- powder based printing (synthetic material - polyamide) - laser sintering) 3D interactive projection: cave
The "cave" represents a 3D immersive projection permitting to move virtually through 3D data, i.e. to walk, for example, through a 3D model of a house or through the interior of a fossil or through the interior of a human or animal body.
www.math.tu-berlin.de/3dlabor/3d-labor/
Designed for those who are new to these disruptive technologies, to understand the big picture and to assess the challenges and opportunities, this masterclass will arm you with knowledge of the latest developments in 3D printing applications and technologies. The class will cover:
Market Landscape and Business Intelligence
- Existing and emerging applications of 3D printing
- Value and supply chains and market drivers
- Current market size and future market opportunity, with 10 year forecasts to 2025
- Unmet needs and opportunities
Technology Appraisal
Analysts will cover each of the following technology options; the advantages and disadvantages of each; case studies; applications; suppliers and manufacturers; costs; technical challenges and opportunities:
- Thermoplastic Extrusion
- Selective Laser Sintering (SLS)
- Stereolithography (SLA)
- Digital Light Processing (DLP)
- Ink-Jetting
- Selective Laser Melting (SLM)
- Blown Powder
- Welding
This masterclass provides you with a full assessment of this complex and rapidly changing technology. Samples of objects made using a range of 3D printing technologies will be shown.
» Register for the masterclass
Monday 27 April 2015 - Afternoon Sessions
7
Energy Storage: Batteries
Franco Gonzalez Senior Technology Analyst IDTechEx |
Dr Xiaoxi He Technology Analyst IDTechEx |
Lorenzo Grande - Helmholtz-Institut Ulm Dr Andreas Willert - Fraunhofer Institute for Electronic Nano Systems |
This introductory masterclass on the topic focuses on batteries: from thin film or printed primary batteries to rechargeable batteries and the winner lithium-ion as it jumps to $60 billion in 2020.
Batteries continue to proliferate new wearable electronics, personal medical diagnostics and treatment, and the Internet of Things. 30 billion button batteries poison and choke humans and other animals every year: safer printed batteries remain a small business. Why? 50% of the cost of a pure-electric mainstream car is the battery, but still the range and price are unacceptable and batteries set fire to cars and planes. What to do? We give basics without equations, explaining why lithium-ion cathode, anode and electrolyte are changing, revealing opportunities for fine chemicals and materials through to new applications.
In particular, it covers:
- Parameters, construction, manufacturing processes and chemistry
- Applications with forecasts, unfulfilled needs and industry structure
- Comparisons of battery technologies and alternatives
- Types of lithium-ion batteries are compared, challenges and what is coming next
- Types of printed and thin/flexible batteries compared, challenges and what is coming next
- New technologies and drivers including laminar batteries, smart skin structural batteries, lithium-ion capacitor (supercabattery), lithium metal battery etc.
» Register for the masterclass
8
E-Textiles, E-Fabric and Stretchable Electronics
for Wearable Technology
Dr Guillaume Chansin Senior Technology Analyst IDTechEx |
James Hayward Technology Analyst IDTechEx |
Christian Dalsgaard - Founder and CTO, Ohmatex ApS Malte von Krshiwoblozki - Fraunhofer IZM |
This masterclass will assess the latest progress with this topic, covering functional materials and components suited for use with textiles, fabrics and stretchable electronics. Typical material choices by substrate type will be shared, including discussion of the challenges around washability, wear resistance, contact resistances etc.
In addition to these technology details this masterclass will cover application needs for wearable electronics - what end users see as the minimum viable products, and will look at case studies of e-textiles today - covering cost, product functionality and market trends.
Key suppliers focussing on this area will be revealed in addition to market forecasts based on the latest IDTechEx research.
» Register for the masterclass
9
The Internet of Things, WSN, RTLS & Active RFID
Dr Peter Harrop Chairman IDTechEx |
Kaivan Karimi, Atmel Corporation Tim Taberner - B+B SmartWorx |
This masterclass covers the technology and markets enabling the Internet of Things (IoT) in addition to related technologies such as Wireless Sensor Networks (WSN), Active RFID and Real Time Locating Systems (RTLS). The class will discuss in detail where all these technologies are going over the next ten years, reality versus the hype, and the business needs and drivers. It specifically addresses:
- Hardware: including active RFID to WSN systems: their cost structure and advantages and disadvantages for each choice
- What IoT is and what part does wireless sensing and RFID play - the opportunities
- Architecture of IoT from the ground up
- Traditional Active RFID, RFID enabled cellphones, smart active labels/ battery assisted passive tags, RTLS and Wireless/Ubiquitous Sensor Networks (USN): technology choices, markets and standards
- The largest orders and case studies by key market verticals
- Lessons of success and failure
- Trends and market size by territory and application type, now and in the future until 2025
- Challenges to tackle and analysis of early adopters
» Register for the masterclass
10
3D Printing: Materials
Rachel Gordon Technology Analyst IDTechEx |
Nicolas Bernardin - Deputy Managing Director, Ceradrop Hans Kimblad - Hoganas |
This masterclass will arm you with the latest knowledge of 3D printing materials - what exists, what is coming and what is needed. Learn what the key players are doing, areas of research and development activity, trends and market sizing. Specifically, the masterclass will cover:
Material Appraisal: Current and Emerging
Analysts will cover each of the following types of 3D printed materials; the advantages and disadvantages of each; key players; costs; performance specifications and limitations; applications and new emerging options and players:
- Photopolymers
- Thermoplastic filament
- Thermoplastic powder
- Metal powder
- Plaster
- Sand + binder
- Welding wire
- Emerging materials
Material Market Appraisal
- Existing and emerging applications of 3D printed materials
- Market drivers and need for new materials
- Current market size for materials and future material market opportunity, with ten-year forecasts to 2025
- Unmet opportunities
This masterclass provides you with a full assessment of this complex and rapidly changing subject. Samples of objects 3D printed from a wide range of materials will be shown.
» Register for the masterclass
11
Conductive Inks, Film & Transparent Conductive Film
Dr Khasha Ghaffarzadeh Head of Consulting IDTechEx |
Rob Hendriks - Novacentrix Dr Patrick O'Callaghan - Patrick O'Callaghan Consulting Limited |
Conductive Inks/Pastes
The conductive ink and paste business is one of the largest in printed electronics space. This will be a $2.2b in 2015 at the ink/paste level and will grow to 3 billion by 2025. Growth will be unevenly spread with several target markets experiencing rapid growth while others decline.
This market however is segmented, consisting of many emerging and mature markets. It consists of touch screens, photovoltaics, automotive, wearables, sensors, logic/memory, smart packaging and in-mold electronics.
Transparent Conductive Films
The market for transparent conductive layers (glass and film) outside display elements is $1.4b in 2015 at the layer (substrate included) level. This market will grow to $2.4b by 2025.
New technologies and numerous companies have been developed to meet the emerging needs but none yet are a run-away success. These new needs are mostly created by the emergence of curved/flexible and/or large-area applications that demand ultra-low sheet resistance values.
The emerging solutions include metal mesh, silver nanowires, graphene, carbon nanotubes, PEDOT, etc. ITO is however proving a resilient solution and the incumbent suppliers have moved to protect their positions by slashing prices.
Market Appraisal
- Current market size and future market opportunity, with 10 year forecasts to 2025. The market will be split by technology as well as by applications
- Key players
- Market drivers, dynamics, challenges and future trends
Technology and Applications Appraisal
Analysts or industry experts will cover how each of the following technology options work; the advantages and disadvantages of each; case studies; challenges, insights, etc. The technologies and applications to be covered are:
- Conductive inks and pastes
- Silver flake paste
- Silver nanoparticles
- Copper ink and paste
- Sintering photo
- Transparent conductive films
- ITO on film
- Silver nanowires
- Metal mesh
- Carbon nanotubes
- Graphene
- PEDOT and others such as inkjet printable nanoparticle inks
Applications
- Touch screens
- Photovoltaics
- Wearable devices
- Smart packaging
- Sensors
- In-mold applications
- Automotive
- Other
Attendees will have a hands-on opportunity to use state-of-the-art photonic curing equipment to process silver and copper inks on low-temperature substrates like paper and polymers. Depositions 10 microns thick and greater will be cured using pulse shaping. Onboard instrumentation will be used to correlate the experimental results with the numerical simulation, which will then be used to optimize the process conditions for speed and lamp lifetime.
» Register for the masterclass
12
Printing Technologies for Electronic Applications
Raghu Das CEO IDTechEx |
Nicolas Bernardin - Deputy Managing Director, CERADROP Jukka Hast - VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland Ltd |
This masterclass assesses the range of printing and non-printing manufacturing and handling options for printed, organic and flexible electronics. Attendees will learn about the technology capabilities, market applicability, key players, trends and opportunities. The class will cover:
Printing Technology and Application Assessment
The following printing types will be covered:
- Screen printing
- Inkjet printing
- Flexo printing (and offset)
- Gravure printing (and offset)
- Nano imprinting and transfer printing
- Coating systems (slot die)
For each type, the session will cover:
- Printing capability (speed, resolution, uniformity, cost etc.) and material suitability
- Strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats assessment
- Suitability to different applications - existing and future
- Detailed case studies and learnings from printing commercial printed electronics products
- Key players
Integrated Manufacturing and Scaling
- Assessment of curing/sintering options
- Integrated systems - suppliers, what is available, what it is being used for
- The value chain and opportunities in equipment supply
- 2015-2025 market detail: how much is and will be printed
This session is partly based on IDTechEx research of over 90 relevant suppliers. Attendees will be shown working demonstrations in addition to handling samples of printed electronics components and products.
Attendees will have a hands-on opportunity to use state-of-the-art photonic curing equipment to process silver and copper inks on low-temperature substrates like paper and polymers. Depositions 10 microns thick and greater will be cured using pulse shaping. Onboard instrumentation will be used to correlate the experimental results with the numerical simulation, which will then be used to optimize the process conditions for speed and lamp lifetime.
» Register for the masterclass
Thursday 30 April 2015 - Morning Sessions
13
Graphene, Carbon Nanotubes and 2D Materials:
Science Technology & Markets
Dr Khasha Ghaffarzadeh Head of Consulting IDTechEx |
Prof Karl Coleman - Applied Graphene Materials, Chief Technical Director Stephen Gibbons - Brewer Science, Inc |
Graphene and 2D Materials
IDTechEx projects the graphene market to grow from around $20 million in 2014 to more than $390 million in 2024 at the material level. The market will be fragmented thanks to a multitude of available graphene types, qualities, manufacturing methods and applications.
The market is still dominated by research interest but the composition will change as other sectors such as energy storage and composites grow. The application pipeline/funnel is very active and some early product examples have already emerged.
The research has moved beyond graphene to other 2D materials that can complement graphene in many different ways. Indeed, we are now at the early stages of a wave of global research around 2D materials.
Carbon Nanotubes
Carbon nanotubes have been around for much longer than graphene yet they have much in common. The production capacity globally is already in the thousands of tonne scale, the prices have dramatically fallen and early medium-volume application have been established. In particular, CNTs have found success as additives in a variety of sectors such as batteries, car parts, and electro-static dissipation packaging.
This masterclasses is designed to give a detailed assessment of graphene and carbon nanotubes. Below is a more detailed blueprint for the masterclass.
Graphene and 2D Materials
- Material properties
- Detailed assessment of manufacturing including chemical vapor deposition including transfer methods, exfoliation, oxidization-reduction, lasma and other methods
- Ten-year segmented market projection
- Application funnel and timeline as well as key challenges
- Key players and production capacities
- Latest trends including latest commercial activity, movement in value chain, activity in Asia, patent trends, investment trends
- Application focus on
- Energy storage including battery and supercapacitors
- Transparent conductive films
- Conductive inks
- Transistors/Logic
- Various composites
- Sensors
- Thermal applications
- A look at some emerging 2D materials including MoS2, WS2, BN, etc
Carbon Nanotubes
- Ten-year segmented market forecasts
- Science and chemistry behind different types of carbon nanotubes (SWCNT, DWCNT, MWCNT)
- Growth techniques including arc discharge, plasma, chemical vapour deposition
- Separation and purification methods
- Key players and production capacities
- Application focus on
- Transistors/Logic
- Transparent conductive films
- Electrostatically painted car parts
- Li ion batteries
- Electrostatic dissipation
- Car tires
- Mechanical re-enforcement
- Others
» Register for the masterclass
14
Flexible Barriers and Substrates for
Printed and Flexible Electronics
Raghu Das CEO IDTechEx |
Dr Bill A MacDonald - DuPont Teijin Films Gael Depres - ARJOWIGGINS Dr Mikko Soderlund - Technical Sales Director, Beneq |
Organic devices, in particular OLED and OPV ones, are highly sensitive to moisture, requiring ultra-high performance barrier or encapsulation layers. Glass is an excellent barrier, but is rigid, therefore potentially stripping away organic electronics of a key differentiating attribute, which is flexibility. Developing flexible, transparent and ultra-high performance remains an unmet technology challenge, and in many cases an impediment against the growth of organic and printed electronics. Numerous solutions are however being developed across the world, ranging from ultra-thin flexible glass to multi-layer films. Success here can change the economics of organic and/or printed electronics.
Substrates are also an essential and often neglected layer for printed and/or organic electronics. They bring robustness and enable flexibility, but at the same time place substantial constraints on the manufacturing process (e.g., thermal budget, dimensional stability) in a way that they can largely determine device performance. Many plastic solutions are now being offered such as PET and PEN but also paper based substrates are increasingly gaining attention.
Market Appraisal
- Market at the application level in OLED lighting, OPVs and flexible displays
- Market at the barrier level
- Key suppliers, technology/approach and performance achievements by player
- Market trends, drivers and challenges
- Addressable market at the application level OLED lighting, OPVs and flexible displays
- Market at the substrate level
- Market trends, drivers and challenges
- Relevancy and challenges per target application
Technology Appraisal
Analysts will cover how each of the following technology options work; the advantages and disadvantages of each; 10 year forecasts; case studies; suppliers; technical and market challenges and opportunities:
- Application requirements
- Layer characteristics
- Technical challenges and progress
- Manufacturing processes (where relevant)
- Performance measurement techniques and challenges
» Register for the masterclass
15
Flexible & Printed Sensors & Actuators
Dr Guillaume Chansin Senior Technology Analyst IDTechEx |
James Hayward Technology Analyst IDTechEx |
Dr Fabrice Domingues Dos Santos - CEO, PiezoTech Professor David Britton - CTO, PST Sensors |
This masterclass will give an overview of sensors and actuators made with printed electronics. Participants will learn about the technology, target markets and value proposition of these devices. Areas where printing adds value will be outlined for each type of sensor (pressure, temperature, optical, touch, electrochemical, etc.). Advantages of flexible sensors, as well as large-area sensors will also be covered and the leading companies in each segment will be presented. For actuators, the main focus will be on electroactive polymers (EAP) and their applications in haptic feedback, speakers, etc.
During the session, IDTechEx will show the latest trends and identify the commercial opportunities. It will include:
- The market size today
- The biggest success so far: the printed glucose sensors
- Emerging printed sensor technologies
- Electroactive polymers and printed PVDF devices
» Register for the masterclass
16
Electric Vehicles: Markets, Trends, Opportunities -
Land, Sea and Air
Dr Peter Harrop Chairman IDTechEx |
Franco Gonzalez Senior Technology Analyst IDTechEx |
This masterclass addresses the latest progress with hybrid,fuel cell and electric vehicles for land, sea and air. It gives the big picture from the league table of largest EV manufacturers to common factors and components for land, water and air vehicles; and across hybrid and pure electric vehicles.
This masterclass covers:
- 10 year forecasts in 37 electric vehicle categories including electric cars, pure and hybrid electric; micro cars; two wheelers such as electric scooters, pedelecs and motorcycles; commercial and industrial EVs such as construction, agricultural and mining electric vehicles; marine electric vehicles such as electric boats and vessels and light electric aircrafts. These are explained in terms of unit numbers, average sales price (ASP) and total market value.
- The differences in the structure of the value chain of these different electric vehicle segments
- The different drivers behind electrification of these types of electric vehicles.
- Commercial, research and pioneering activities in different types of electric vehicles.
- Different types of charging infrastructure required for different types of electric vehicles.
- Activities of developers of electric and hybrid vehicles - covering land, water and airborne vehicles
- Progress of companies are compared in relation to market shares per type of electric vehicle category
» Register for the masterclass
Thursday 30 April 2015 - Afternoon Sessions
17
Displays & Lighting
Dr Guillaume Chansin Senior Technology Analyst IDTechEx |
Dr Norman Bardsley - Consultant on Displays & Organic Electronics, Bardsley Consulting |
Displays are the largest market segment in organic electronics. The OLED display market is now worth more than $15 billion and OLED TVs are already available. For many panel makers the LCD business has become loss making and so display companies seek differentiation. The next step will be flexible OLED displays that are fabricated on plastic substrates instead of glass. In lighting applications, the competitive landscape is fundamentally different as OLED technologies face a tough battle against inorganic LEDs.
This masterclass will guide you through:
- The full range of technologies (OLED displays, e-paper, electroluminescent and other emerging display technology options)
- The latest in the development of flexible OLED displays
- Manufacturing methods and their pros and cons
- Next generation solid-state lighting: OLED vs LED
- Example of applications and products on the market
- The market drivers and the issues that remain
- The leading companies in the value chain, along with their positioning and strengths
- 10 year forecasts
» Register for the masterclass
18
RFID and Its Progress Towards Being Printed
Raghu Das CEO IDTechEx |
Dr Xiaoxi He Technology Analyst IDTechEx |
In 2014 more than 7 billion RFID tags will be sold, up from less than 6 billion tags in 2013. Tag cost is reducing as numbers increase but the year potential is for hundreds of billions of tags. The RFID market and use and potential use of printed electronics is explored in great depth in this session. The masterclass will cover:
Detailed global RFID market assessment
- 10 year forecasts of sales of tags by application and by tag frequency
- Global RFID market by application
- Successes and failures
- Drivers and market adoption trends
RFID tag manufacturing
- Price tear down
- Antenna manufacturing options - including printing assessment
- Chip attach options
- Key suppliers
Printed RFID
- Types of printed RFID technologies and full appraisal
- Leading developers
- Market traction
- Challenges and opportunities
- Integration of multiple printed electronics functionalities
This session is based on research conducted by IDTechEx on the RFID and printed electronics markets since 1999. It will provide an exceptionally comprehensive assessment of the RFID sector and the opportunities for printed electronics within it.
» Register for the masterclass
19
Structural Electronics:
Markets, Technologies, Opportunities
Dr Peter Harrop Chairman IDTechEx |
Miikka Karna - TactoTek |
Structural Electronics (SE) is one of the most important technological developments of this century. It forms a key part of the dream, formulated decades ago, of computing disappearing into the fabric of society. Structural electronics involves electronic and/or electrical components and circuits that act as load-bearing, protective structures, replacing dumb structures such as vehicle bodies or conformally placed upon them. It is of huge interest to the aerospace industry which is usually the first adopter, the automotive industry and in civil engineering both with compelling needs but its reach is much broader even than this. Electric cars badly need longer range and more space for the money and, in civil engineering, corrosion of reinforced concrete structures and tighter requirements for all structures, including early warning of problems, are among the market drivers for structural electronics.
This introductory masterclass to the topic reviews the applications for structural electronics, now and emerging, assessing what is happening and what is still needed. Progress by key technology type is given including key suppliers and the technology roadmaps. This will cover topics such as smart skin, 3D printed electronics, flexible and printed electronics systems, energy storage (batteries and supercapacitors forming structures), molded electronics, building integrated photovoltaics and textile based electronics. Global trends and the market outlook is provided based on new IDTechEx research on the topic matter.
» Register for the masterclass
20
Electric Vehicles: New Material
and Component Opportunities
Franco Gonzalez Senior Technology Analyst IDTechEx |
Dr Arnaldo Arancibia - TU Berlin |
In the process of electrification of vehicles there is plenty of room for innovation. Gasoline and diesel car components and systems have evolved during the last 100 years and whilst electric vehicles have been developed for the last 30 years or so, they are still far of being optimized. New materials have been developed recently that are opening new possibilities for new concepts for better performance components. This masterclass explores the evolution of these developments and what could be their impact on future automotive concepts.
Electric vehicles will need new components and new materials given that the energy source, drive trains, motors and control systems are completely different to conventional fuel vehicles. This masterclass will explore the opportunities for new materials and components, covering each of the main categories as follows:
- Electric motors
- Range extenders
- Regenerative braking
- Energy harvesting, such as thermoelectrics, shock absorbers and conformal PV
- Energy storage: batteries and supercapacitors
- Charging systems and charging infrastructure, including wireless charging
- Light weight and functional materials such as smart windows/glass
- Technologies for autonomous vehicles such as LIDAR
Attendees will learn about the requirement from vehicle makers based on their vehicle development roadmaps, current state of the technology, suppliers, development trends and areas of focus and undersupplied development areas. In addition, ten year forecasts will be provided for some of the key sectors above, allowing you to quantify your opportunity.
» Register for the masterclass
21
Photovoltaics: Technologies and Markets for
Crystalline Silicon and Thin Film PV
Dr Khasha Ghaffarzadeh Head of Consulting IDTechEx |
Dr Jarl Nissfolk - Exeger Mr Giovanni Fili - CEO, Exeger Dr Bernd Stannowski - Helmholtz Zentrum Berlin |
This masterclass will take place at the Research Center PVcomB and will also include a tour.
PVcomB is a new center for technology transfer in Thin-Film Photovoltaics, founded by the Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin (HZB), Technische Universität Berlin, and the University of Applied Sciences Berlin. PVcomB's main goal is to support world-wide growth of thin-film photovoltaic technologies. In a baseline process, two dedicated research-lines produce thin-film PV modules with an area of 30 x 30 cm2 (Si and CIGS).
PVcomB has created a unique PV-cluster in Berlin-Adlershof, supported by many of the important international photovoltaic companies. In 2009, PVcomB was awarded a 15 million € grant from the federal government and the State of Berlin
www.pvcomb.de
The photovoltaic industry is already a large business. The installed global capacity in 2014 is estimated as 40.5 GW. The photovoltaic industry is one that has undergone a recent intense period of consolidation trigged by rapid production capacity expansion in China and subsidy reduction in Europe. The market has now recovered and is showing strong signs of growth with demand particularly picking up in non-European territories.
The photovoltaic industry consist of a multitude of technologies. Wafer-based silicon photovoltaics dominate the market. At the same, however, a range of thin film solutions such as CdTe, CIGS, and a-Si have also matured and captured market share.
New forms of solar technologies for new, niche markets are also being developed. Here, we will examie several such technologies such as organic photovotlaics, dye sensitised solar cells, flexible GaAs and also pervoskite solar cells.
This masterclass is designed as follows:
- Photovoltaic markets
- Historical prices
- Historical market development
- Installed cell capacity and projections
- Supply split by territory
- Demand split by territory and application
- Market split by solar cell technology
- Market projections split by technology
- Photovoltaics: basic principles and operation
- Wafer-based silicon cells, thin film technologies (e.g. amorphous silicon, multi-crystalline, CdTe, CIGS), III-V/ II-VI multijunctions: manufacturing, performance, latest, etc
- Organic photovoltaic and dye sensitised solar cells:
- Materials (basic overview)
- Selling points
- Challenges
- Lifetime and efficiency projections
- Encapsulation technologies
- Market assessment
- BIPV
- Smart packaging
- Off grid and development world
- Street furniture
- Posters and point-of-sale advertisement
- Consumer goods
- Key suppliers
- Ten-year segmented market projection
- Pervoskites: latest trends, progress, challenges, players
- GaAs: latest trends, manufacture, progress, challenges, players