Full profile interview
24 Sep 2013

Sumitomo Chemical and CDT
Sumitomo Chemical is a Japanese company. It's a member of the Sumitomo group and is listed on the Nikkei 225. The company is one of Japan's major chemical companies and was founded in 1913. The company has been working on organic materials for OLEDs for about a decade, forming a joint venture with Cambridge UK based CDT (Cambridge display Technology). Sumitomo Chemical acquired CDT for $285 million in 2007, at price similar to the amount that had been invested in CDT until that point.
Full profile interview
24 Sep 2013

Zink Technologies
ZinkTech was formed in 2011. It is attached to a group of patent attorneys who look for interesting patents that are not fulfilled, and buy them and try to commercialise them, with the help of groups such as universities.
Full profile interview
24 Sep 2013

InkTec Co., Ltd
InkTec was formed in 1992. It has 375 staff, of which 80 are involved in R&D. The company had annual sales last years of $74.8million and is a publicly listed company. The company is very active in printed electronics, offering a variety of conductive inks as well as printing services.
Full profile interview
24 Sep 2013

Teknek Ltd.
Teknek was founded in 1978, supplying consumables to the Printed Circuit Board (PCB) industry worldwide. In 1984 Teknek started to develop a contact cleaning technology to meet the growing need for high levels of surface cleanliness required in the electronics industry, particularly PCB manufacturers. The Teknek Clean Machine soon became popular and an integral part of any PCB production line.
Full profile interview
24 Sep 2013

Promethean Particles
Promethean Particles design, develop and manufacture inorganic nanoparticle dispersions to customer's specifications. The company uses continuous hydrothermal synthesis to make the desired product for each application and backs this up with large scale manufacturing capability (currently up to 10 tonnes per year with a 1000 TPA plant build underway).
Background
24 Sep 2013

PhosphonicS Ltd
PhosphonicS technology was developed by Professor Alice Sullivan at Queen Mary, University of London. At Queen Mary, a general and economically viable method for silica functionalisation was discovered using vinyltrimethoxysilane (VTMS) as a coupling agent. In 2001 PhosphonicS acquired the technology from University of London to select and commercialise areas of application
Full profile interview
24 Sep 2013

DZP Technologies Ltd
The company was formed in 2008 and is head-quartered in Cambridge, UK. It is a small company working on a range of technologies, including low temperature conductive inks, graphene inks and laser-nduced transfer for printing electronic devices (LITPED)
23 Sep 2013

Printed and organic electronics in Korea
IDTechEx has spent almost two weeks in Korea visiting executives at leading companies and attending conferences. Company profiles will be given in our Market Intelligence Portal over the coming weeks. In this article we summarise some of our observations from the country.
23 Sep 2013

Creating electricity with caged atoms
Researchers are producing a new and considerably more efficient class of thermoelectric materials.
23 Sep 2013

Network of unmanned undersea platforms assist manned vessels
To maintain advantage over adversaries, U.S. naval forces need a way to project key capabilities in multiple locations at once, without the time and expense of building new vessels to deliver those capabilities.
Full profile interview
23 Sep 2013

Vinci Technologies
Vinci Technologies are developing a measuring instrument for water vapour permeation.
Full profile interview
21 Sep 2013

Clothing+
Clothing+ has been in business for more than 15 years and was a pioneer in the mass production of textile-based heart rate measurement systems. The company is divided in two business units: Sports and Medical. While Sports has grown faster recently, they expect that Medical will become the main part of the business in the longer term. In July 2015, they were acquired by Jabil Circuit.
20 Sep 2013

Near Field Communication (NFC) 2014-2024
IDTechEx first published a detailed report on NFC five years ago. In this article we share some of the findings in the new IDTechEx report, "Near Field Communication (NFC) 2014-2024".
20 Sep 2013

Graphene Frontiers awarded grant for roll-to-roll graphene production
Graphene Frontiers, a company developed through the University of Pennsylvania's Center for Technology Transfer, has been awarded a $744,600 grant from the National Science Foundation to develop roll-to-roll production of graphene, the "miracle material" at the heart of the 2010 Nobel Prize in Physics.
20 Sep 2013

Highest open-circuit voltage for quantum dot solar cells
Scientists and engineers have demonstrated the highest recorded open-circuit voltages for quantum dot solar cells to date.
20 Sep 2013

Estrima Birò MicroEV Quadricycle removable battery
IDTechEx considers the fact that electric bicycle batteries can be removed for charging to be a huge benefit to those wishing to prevent theft and those parking where no charging is possible or where the vehicle may be vandalised during charging. Now that considerable benefit has come to microEVs.
19 Sep 2013

First self-powered artificial retina
The Natcore retina comprises an array of carbon nanotubes, grown vertically on a substrate. The nanotubes are coated with a semiconducting material, in effect wrapping a solar cell around them, with the tips of the nanotubes exposed and arranged to extend into the ganglion nerves.
19 Sep 2013

Scientists calculate the energy required to store wind and solar power
Renewable energy holds the promise of reducing carbon dioxide emissions. But there are times when solar and wind farms generate more electricity than is needed by consumers.
External press release
19 Sep 2013

Microbial power storage shows it can do the job
New results have proven that certain microorganisms are capable of producing natural gas under industrial conditions.
19 Sep 2013

Spider silk turned into electrical wire for medical devices
Scientists have created microscopic wires out of spider silk that can conduct electricity.