RSS FeedFacebookTwitter
Click here for an RSS Feed of Printed Electronics World
Become a fan of Printed Electronics World on Facebook
Follow Printed Electronics World on Twitter
 
200 Organisations Now Developing Printed Transistors and Memory
18 July 2007
Country:

200 Organisations Now Developing Printed Transistors and Memory

 
Forward to friend
×
We welcome your response to this Printed Electronics World Article. Edited responses may be posted in our regular response column. Responses can be anonymous, otherwise, please leave your name and email address.
Name
Email
Response
 
 
Printing is the basis of the new electronics. As Dr Colin Marsh of The Technology Partnership in the UK says, "The question is not whether printed electronics will change our world, but when. The first battle is being fought in the multi-billion-dollar markets of displays and data. Leaps in material performance and next-generation printing technologies are powering this drive to commercialisation."
 
Transistors and memory is the engine of this revolution. The market potential for these is greater than that for displays or any other printed and potentially printed component, though printed displays have hit the market first and are backed by more companies. Nevertheless, the number of organisations developing printed and potentially printed transistors and memory continues to rise and it has already reached 200 in number, 150 of which are analysed in the new report Printed Transistors and Memory 2007-2027  published July 2007.
 
There will be many winners in the supply and use of such transistors and memory and their materials, because the variety of needs is so great. It encompasses edible circuits, biodegradable and disposable devices, fault tolerant ones, those that take over a second to operate but are on paper and of extremely low cost and those that work at terahertz frequencies (Plastic E Print already achieves this very high frequency in the laboratory).
 
Only a minority of developers have decided what products to sell that contain these devices. They have chosen backplane drivers, usually for electrophoretic displays, or RFID in the main. However, the market potential may be greater for other things such as smart packages, merchandising features and toys. A possible split of sales in 2013 is shown below.
 
Source: IDTechEx report
 
 
 
Source of top image:
×Thin Film Electronics
Thin Film Electronics
is exhibiting at
Printed Electronics & Photovoltaics USA 2010
Santa Clara, CA, USA
1 - 2 Dec 2010
Thin Film Electronics
 
Forward to friend
 
×
We welcome your response to this Printed Electronics World Article. Edited responses may be posted in our regular response column. Responses can be anonymous, otherwise, please leave your name and email address.
Name
Email
Response
 


Dr Peter Harrop
Article by Dr Peter Harrop
 
Dr Peter Harrop is the Founder and Chairman of IDTechEx.
 
Telephone: +44 (0)1256 862163
Email:
 

To learn More:

Attend:

  • Printed Electronics & Photovoltaics USA 2010
  • Read the latest research:

  • Printed, Organic & Flexible Electronics Forecasts, Players & Opportunities 2009-2029
  • Printed and Thin Film Transistors and Memory 2009-2029
  • Displays and Lighting: OLED, e-paper, electroluminescent and beyond
  • Brand Enhancement by Electronics in Packaging 2010-2020
  • Other Recent Articles

  • Analysis of printed electronics forecasts in 2008
  • Organic & Printed Electronics Forecasts, Players & Opportunities
  • Flextech Alliance Awards contract to Etched in Time
  • Organic Electronics: A $30 Bn business in 2015
  • Breakthroughs at Tokyo University
  • Read more articles on these topics

  • Applications & Markets
  • Logic & Memory
  • Power
  • Sensors, Sound & Other Components
  • Displays & Lighting
  • Materials
  • Manufacturing
  • Copyright © 1999-2010 IDTechEx