Events


Reports




Wireless Sensor Networks 2009-2019 
The New Market for Ubiquitous Sensor Networks (USN)

Printed Electronics - Customer Sourcebook & Routes to Profit 
Case studies, opportunities in the value chain, and progress at over 1000 organizations

Presentations

Organic Photodetectors 
Mr Klaus G Schroeter, CEO NANOIDENT Technologies AG, Austria at Printed Electronics USA 2005

Printed & Organic Electronics: Forecasts, Players & Opportunities 
Dr Peter Harrop, Chairman IDTechEx, United Kingdom at Printed Electronics USA 2005

Encouraging Consumer Interaction in the Medical and Consumer Markets 
Mr Thomas Grinnan, Vice President MeadWestvaco Healthcare Packaging, United States at Printed Electronics USA 2005

Printed Electronics in Use in the Medical and Security Sectors 
Ms Stina Ehrensvärd, Marketing Director Cypak AB, Sweden at Printed Electronics USA 2005

Sister Site Articles

Energy Harvesting Journal
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
 
Loc8tor increasingly uses printed electronics
10 March 2008
Country: United Kingdom

Loc8tor increasingly uses printed 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
 
 
Loc8tor is a UK startup with first year sales that would put most other RFID startups to shame. Its products are aimed at the consumer market but are also beginning to be used in industry. These very affordable hand held devices and tiny, feather light, three centimeter tags permit items, people and animals to be located in 3D and, where necessary, electronically ring fenced. For example, you can know if your daughter goes more than 30 meters away from you in a theme park or if an asset is being taken away without permission. It works by Received Signal Strength Indication RSSI. Up to 24 tags can be separately located.It is a basic form of Real Time Locating System RTLS that costs ten thousand times less than a sophisticated RTLS system.
Printed YAGI antenna
Loc8tor employs printed carbon and silver conductors for the touch keyboard, the tag battery activator and the state of the art Yagi antenna. A Yagi antenna, also known as a Yagi-Uda array or simply a YAGI, is a unidirectional antenna commonly used in communications when a frequency is above 10 MHz but here it is used at 2.4 GHz. A basic YAGI consists of two or three straight elements, each measuring approximately one half of a wavelength. This antenna is inherently balanced. It was invented in 1926 by Hidetsugu Yagi and Shintaro Uda of Tohoku Imperial University, Sendai, Japan.
 
A typical YAGI has one reflector and one or more directors - here just one. The antenna propagates electromagnetic field energy in the direction running from the driven element toward the director and is most sensitive to incoming electromagnetic field energy in this same direction. A YAGI antenna not only has a unidirectional radiation and response pattern but it concentrates the radiation and response. A magnified picture of the tiny 3 cm tags is shown below.
The tiny, lightweight Loc8tor tags
The Loc8tor detector
Reverse showing the two printed YAGI antenna stripes
 
For more see www.loc8tor.co.uk and attend Printed Electronics Europe 2008 .
 
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
  • Wireless Sensor Networks 2009-2019
  • Printed Electronics - Customer Sourcebook & Routes to Profit
  • Other Recent Articles

  • Terepac partnership on low-cost flexible electronics packaging
  • Wireless digital plaster trials underway at London hospital
  • SmartKem launches new website
  • Electrolux, Kimberly Clark and the Printed Electronics uptake
  • Read more articles on these topics

  • Applications & Markets
  • Materials
  • Sensors, Sound & Other Components » Sensors
  • Displays & Lighting » OLED
  • Applications & Markets » RFID
  • Power » Photovoltaics
  • Sensors, Sound & Other Components » Sensors » Temperature
  • Copyright © 1999-2010 IDTechEx