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Dr Peter Harrop, Chairman IDTechEx, United Kingdom at Printed Electronics USA 2005

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Dr David Margolese, V.P., Technology Development ORFID Corporation, United States at Printed Electronics USA 2005

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Analysis of printed electronics forecasts in 2008
2 April 2008
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Analysis of printed electronics forecasts in 2008

 
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IDTechEx expect the spend on printed and thin film electronics beyond conventional silicon to be $1.58 Billion this year. The majority of this is for OLED display panels ($0.69 Billion) which is the value of the panel and not the final device. Virtually all of this is not printed and on glass. Second largest by value is photovoltaics (PV) beyond conventional crystalline and amorphous silicon, accounting for $0.4 Billion. This is not organic PV however, which is still some time away from commercialization, but inorganic technologies such as CIGS and CdTe devices. For example, First Solar has an order book exceeding $2 Billion for CdTe PV devices which they will be delivering over several years. Third largest is not a specific product, but a value for inks for $0.21 Billion, which are used for multiple different applications such as interconnects for switches, membrane keyboards, windscreen heaters. We give th
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is presenting at
Printed Electronics & Photovoltaics Europe 2010
Dresden, Germany
13 - 14 Apr 2010
e ink value only here rather than the value of the product because the products are so diverse in scope. Then we have the market for sensors, at $0.11 Billion, which are printed sensors used for glucose meters - approximately 2.2 billion are sold each year. $50 Million will be spend on electroluminescent displays and $48 Million on electrophoretic displays (the value of the front plane of the display itself rather than the end device).
 
On the other hand, we see the market for logic and memory beyond conventional silicon to be just $10 Million this year - and virtually all of that is samples and some services with some commercial sales beginning towards the end of the year from Kovio,
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PolyIC
is exhibiting at
Printed Electronics & Photovoltaics USA 2010
Santa Clara, CA, USA
1 - 2 Dec 2010
PolyIC and PolymerVision, for example.
Printed and conformal/flexible small in 2008
Of all the technologies covered in the $1.58 Billion market, only 27.8% of the components will be predominately printed in 2008, rising to 79.6% in 2018. Similarly, in 2008 only 15.7% of the components are on a non rigid substrate (such as sensors and EL displays), rising to 74% in 2018. The greatest opportunity is for devices which can be printed and are flexible.
When devices will reach $100 Million
Over the next few years we see particularly strong growth of inorganic PV technologies beyond silicon and display front plane technologies. We see logic and memory components taking off as a hundred million dollar market from 2011/2012; batteries 2012 and OLED lighting from 2013/2014 achieving similar sizes. This is based on our research of progress of companies in these technology areas and our assessment of the technology development. By 2018 the market for all this new toolkit of electronics will be $46.94 Billion.
Market by territory
If we look at the market size by territory, IDTechEx find that most work is taking place in Europe, the USA and Japan. In many respects Europe is in the lead. For instance, the first printed electronics factories are appearing there. However, we note that the creation of new companies is low given the huge academic effort going on there. The USA is proving better at creating new companies. In East Asia while the number of organizations working on the topic is slightly less than the other two continents, it disguises the fact that those companies tend to be huge conglomerates. By spend, we see that in 2008 56% of the market spend is in East Asia. This is because the biggest component - OLED display modules - are made there and bought by companies making devices, such as MP3 players. However, it disguises the fact that many of the devices are then sold to North America and Europe. Indeed some manufacturing will be moving to East Asia in due course but we also see a higher than expected market in Europe and USA given the dispersed manufacture capability of this new electronics.
 
Market by Territory 2008
Unique new report giving the big picture
For more information, read Printed & Organic Electronics Forecasts, Players & Opportunities 2008-2028 . The report includes forecasts of markets by geographical region, component, organics versus inorganic, flexible/conformal and many other parameters. Realistic timescales and the emergence of new products are given, as are impediments and opportunities for the years to come. Statistics for activity in East Asia is given. What will be the split between organic, inorganic and composite solutions by year? It is all here, with activities of over 600 companies listed. See www.IDTechEx.com/pe  for more details.
 
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Raghu Das
Article by Raghu Das
 
Raghu Das is the CEO of IDTechEx. He has authored many reports on the topic and conducts global consulting projects.
 
Telephone: + 1 617 577 7890
Email:
 

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  • 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
  • Printed Electronics - Customer Sourcebook & Routes to Profit
  • Brand Enhancement by Electronics in Packaging 2010-2020
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