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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2017
30 Jan 2017

Smart Tattoos! Wearable Technology by Cellotape

Video Interview with Cellotape at the IDTechEx Show! in Santa Clara, USA (November 16-17 2016)
29 Jan 2017

Nicomatic shows how robots can work with their printed electronics

Video Interview with Nicomatic at the IDTechEx Show! in Santa Clara, USA (November 16-17 2016)
26 Jan 2017

Self-sustaining, interactive, solar-powered street furniture concept

Equipped photovoltaic film in order to be energy self-sustaining, the furniture will include a very-low-energy, interactive screen with a range of possibilities for disseminating information, including a calendar of city events, for polling residents about a given topic, for example. Residents will be able to interact with the screen using their mobile phones.
25 Jan 2017

Gaugewear

IDTechEx met with Jeff Wallingford, Founder & CEO of Gaugewear whilst a CES 2017 in Las Vegas. Based in Boulder, Colorado, they are a start-up commercialising wearable sensors measuring core body temperature using surface RF antennas.
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24 Jan 2017

Thinfilm receives follow-up orders for electronic article surveillance

Thin Film Electronics ASA has announced that it has received two new orders for Electronic Article Surveillance anti-theft tags.
23 Jan 2017

Haptics for wearable devices, the evolution of man-machine interaction

Video Interview with Novasentis at the IDTechEx Show! in Santa Clara, USA (November 16-17 2016)
23 Jan 2017

CES2017: Air quality has become a big theme

Every year at CES you are guaranteed to see the latest TVs and gadgets for your home. The 2017 edition was no exception, with the expected emphasis on virtual reality, high dynamic range displays, and voice controlled assistants.
23 Jan 2017

Thinfilm strengthens NFC label conversion services in Europe

Thin Film Electronics ASA has announced a partnership with Sweden-based Beneli AB.
19 Jan 2017

Webinar Tuesday 31 January - Aerogels - Emergence of profitable market

IDTechEx are hosting a free webinar on Tuesday 31 January 2017 entitled Aerogels - The Emergence of a Profitable Market.
19 Jan 2017

Kinestral reinvents glass: say hello to interactive windows and walls

Kinestral Technologies has launched Halio™, a smart-tinting glass that claims to be the world's most advanced and responsive natural light management system.
18 Jan 2017

IDTechEx Research new report on printed, organic, flexible electronics

IDTechEx Research, a leading provider of independent market research, business intelligence and events on emerging technology, announces the availability of a new report, Printed, Organic & Flexible Electronics Forecasts, Players & Opportunities 2017-2027.
17 Jan 2017

Interview with VerdanTech at the IDTechEx Show! USA 2016

Video Interview with VerdanTech at the IDTechEx Show! in Santa Clara, USA (November 16-17 2016)
17 Jan 2017

New thin films can self-repair following damage

Separating one chemical from another may sound incredibly dull, but it's vital to making everything from plastic dishes to cleaning drinking water.
16 Jan 2017

Ground-breaking developmental thermosetting resin technology

Video Interview with Panasonic at the IDTechEx Show! in Santa Clara, USA (November 16-17 2016)
13 Jan 2017

3D printing rigid PCB series with flexible conductive connectors

Nano Dimension Ltd announced that its wholly owned subsidiary, Nano Dimension Technologies Ltd, has successfully 3D printed a series of multi-layered rigid PCBs, connected through printed flexible conductive connections.
13 Jan 2017

Carbonics introduces first ZEBRA carbon-on-silicon solution

Carbonics, Inc has launched its ZEBRA carbon-on-silicon technology for radio frequency components and devices in the rapidly expanding wireless, communications, defense and aerospace markets.
11 Jan 2017

Will Amazon Go win the war between computer vision and RFID in retail?

The scenario that shopping without checkout lines has been described multiple times since the introduction of radio frequency identification (RFID) technology and many people believed if that could come true, it must be RFID that enables it. However, Amazon Go will demonstrate to us that other emerging technologies are going to realize it first, due to the significant improvement of deep learning, computer vision and sensor fusion, as announced on 5th December 2016. This leads us to consider which technology will be the future in the retail industry: computer vision, or RFID?
10 Jan 2017

Mind-blowing! A shirt that creates functional electric stimulation

Video Interview with Myant at the IDTechEx Show! in Santa Clara, USA (November 16-17 2016)
9 Jan 2017

Hitachi showcases waterproof, stretchable electronics

Video Interview with Hitachi at the IDTechEx Show! in Santa Clara, USA (November 16-17 2016)
9 Jan 2017

A flexible transistor that conforms to skin

Researchers have created a stretchy transistor that can be elongated to twice its length with only minimal changes in its conductivity.