20 Sep 2007

Advances in Stretchable Electronics
Stretchability is needed in electronics if it is to be foldable, tightly conformal or following the form of something that changes in shape, like the human body.
19 Sep 2007

Hi Tech Insoles Could Prevent 76,000 Amputations per Year in the US
New Zealand based company Zephyr Technology is working with scientists at AUT University in Auckland to create high tech insoles for shoes, using sensor technology to measure foot temperatures to sense the onset of potential ulceration conditions in diabetics, potentially reducing a major health problem that results in 90,000 amputations each year in the United States.
18 Sep 2007

AIST Japan Gives Latest View of Printed Display Evolution
At the IDTechEx conference Printed Electronics Asia, held last week, Kiyoshi Yase of the Photonics Research Institute at the National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology (AIST) in Japan gave a comprehensive analysis of the evolution of flexible and printable organic electronics.
17 Sep 2007

Roadmap to Commercialisation of Electrophoretic Displays
Microencapsulated electrophoretic ink displays are now in volume production. For example, E ink FPL is being coated in Roll to roll (R2R) production kilometers at a time, segmented displays on plastic substrates are in volume production and glass TFT displays are in volume production.
14 Sep 2007

More Activity in Printed Electronics by Western Giants
Although there are very few Western giant corporations active in printed and potentially printed electronics compared to East Asia, there are some new entrants in 2007 and some of those already active have sharply increased the level of their activity, particularly in Europe.
13 Sep 2007

Germany is the Leader in Photovoltaics
The world's biggest exhibition in photovoltaics was held in parallel to the 22nd European Photovoltaic Solar Energy Conference in Milan, Italy, from 3rd to 7th September. It was an impressive event with overall around 500 exhibitors, 3000 scientists, industry representatives and politicians from 83 countries.
12 Sep 2007

Tokyo Printed Electronics Conference Reveals Major New Trends
IDTechEx has hosted several successful RFID conferences in Tokyo, Japan but the Printed Electronics Asia conference, September 11-12 was a first for them. It was very successful. Indeed, it was sold out, with over 180 people attending and an exhibition. IDTechEx will now do a much bigger conference and exhibition on this subject in Tokyo next year. Many new trends were revealed by the international line up of best-in-class speakers.
11 Sep 2007

Who is Interested in Printed Electronics?
Printed electronics will eventually interest a high proportion of the seven billion people that will be on the planet because it will transform their lives. It will eventually involve over 100,000 manufacturers. Today, printed and potentially printed electronics is already of interest to over 10,000 organisations.
10 Sep 2007

New Broadband UHF Labels with Printed Antennas
Although most UHF passive tag suppliers lose money, some spectacularly so, several are in it for the long haul and they continue to improve their products.
7 Sep 2007

Quantum Dot Materials May Improve Efficiency of Silicon Solar Cells
In the race to make clean technologies more efficient and marketable a breakthrough has been made by Researchers at the U.S. Department of Energy's National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL), collaborating with Innovalight, Inc., showing that a new and important effect called Multiple Exciton Generation (MEG) occurs efficiently in silicon nanocrystals.
6 Sep 2007

Plextronics Closes $20.6 Million Series B Financing
Plextronics, Inc. announced last week that it has completed a $20.6 million Series B financing. The round is led by Solvay North America Investments, LLC, a member of the Solvay Group, an international chemical and pharmaceutical group headquartered in Brussels.
5 Sep 2007

A Paper Thin Battery the Size of a Postage Stamp Rensselaer US
A new energy storage device that is only slightly bigger than the size of a postage stamp has been developed by scientists at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute.
4 Sep 2007

Innovative Smart Skin Patches Heal Wounds
Now we have smart skin patches that heal wounds by restoring the natural electrical signals in the skin at the site of a wound thanks to BIOFiSICA.
3 Sep 2007

Fast Forward For New Inorganic Solar Cells
Work on inorganic thin film photovoltaic devices beyond crystalline and amorphous silicon is now wide ranging, both geographically and in topic.
29 Aug 2007

UK Start-up Inkjets Smart Posters
UK start up company Polymertronics is developing a new nanotechnology that will allow digital inkjet printing and instant curing of flexible electronic components.
28 Aug 2007

Reel to Reel Production of CIGS Photovoltaics
There are far more developers of inorganic compound photovoltaics than of organic versions in the world. In particular, there are more developers of copper indium gallium diselenide CIGS solar cells than for any other non-silicon technology.
24 Aug 2007

Different Priorities in Printed and Thin Film Electronics
As IDTechEx completes research for its trilogy of reports on printed and potentially printed electronics in, respectively, East Asia, Europe and North America, it is becoming clear how different the priorities are in these three regions.
23 Aug 2007

Electrowetting Could be a Disruptive Technology for End Users
Philips Research in Eindhoven, the Netherlands have demonstrated that electrowetting is an attractive technology for the rapid manipulation of liquids on a micrometer scale and have shown that electrowetting can also be used to form the basis of a reflective display that is significantly faster than electrophoretic displays
22 Aug 2007

Scientific Challenges in Sustainable Energy Technology - DSSC
DSSC photoelectrochemical solar cells that mimic the action of chlorophyll in nature are already being commercialized. They are ten times as efficient as the version met in nature and they are more tolerant of reflected (polarized) light, light at narrow angles of incidence and low levels of light than most alternatives.
21 Aug 2007

German Government and Industry Boost New Technology
Last year, photovoltaic modules had a global market volume of 8 billion euros. The segment is expected to grow by more than 20 percent annually between now and 2020.