Wednesday, 13 July 2011

New Emphasis at the Largest Printed Electronics Event

By: Dr. Harry Zervos, Technology Analyst, IDTechEx


This year's Printed Electronics USA (www.IDTechEx.com/peUSA) will take place in Santa Clara on November 30 and December 1. Analysts IDTechEx who organise the largest event on the subject, have paid a lot of attention once more to the end user streams. Their presence and contributions to the latest instalment of the successful series of events will be appropriate to the new direction of this burgeoning industry.


Brand Enhancement for Consumer Goods

All consumer packaged goods (CPG) leaders and their best brand facing support companies now have multi-disciplinary teams working in the area of electronic functionality integration. They see printed electronics modernizing everything: product, packaging, shelf edge, point of sale, posters and rewards using electronics on both paper and plastic film. Much of this is not entirely printed as yet but that is the route to cost reduction and greater functionality. Fulton Innovation's concept of Nestlé's Cheerios cereal box, with displays on the packaging powered by inductive coupling, gave us a glimpse of what is coming and at the conference; companies such as MARS, P&G and Reckitt Benckiser will talk of their needs and adoption strategies.


Source: Fulton Innovation

Electroluminescent cereal packaging powered by inductive coupling, created by Fulton Innovation.



On the media and advertising side, with posters that interact with phones, emit aromas or talk alongside electronically enabled magazine pages, this industry now realises also that printed electronics is a route to much greater impact and targeting as well as reusable, reprogrammable, environmental media.


Product Enhancement for Consumer Electronics

The development and interest in previously impossible consumer electronics, such as very large volume printed electronics products, has now begun. It is at an earlier stage than CPG adoption with the exception of use in value-engineering existing consumer electronics (such as flat screen televisions, where many layers are replaced with one printed layer). Materials and electronics giants such as BASF, Samsung, SONY and LG, as well as start-ups and research institutions are all very actively involved in the development of the value chain, from equipment and materials providers all the way to integrators of components and complete device manufacturers.


Military and Aerospace

It is not reduction of cost that is the target in military and aerospace applications. The projects and developments at this front focus on reliability, damage tolerance, safety, space saving, and sometimes added benefits such as stretchability, flexibility and transparency. Printed electronics offer possibilities that haven't been available before and representatives from Boeing and the US Army will be at the conference to discuss current and future directions for the applications necessary, or already under development, in these sectors.


Healthcare

Healthcare applications address such aspects as improving speed of response and cost by introducing more disposable testers and electronic drug delivery systems, but also sophisticated uses elsewhere in healthcare. For example, Stora Enso will be presenting on their development of wireless pharmaceutical packaging solutions integrating printed electronics, while Dr Nanshu Lu from the University of Illinois will be discussing the challenges relating to bio-integration of "soft electronics". Dr Lu is a member of Prof John A. Roger's team of materials scientists, mechanical and electrical engineers and physicians that have successfully integrated stretchable electronics technology with standard endocardial balloon catheters.

Source: University of Illinois

Fully inflated multifunctional balloon instrumented with temperature, tactile and EKG sensors on islands interconnected by non-coplanar serpentine wires.

Finally, addressing the architectural and the build environment (photovoltaics and wireless sensors taking centre stage at this front) as well as mobility issues relevant to future generations of electric vehicles and how they can benefit from adoption of printed electronics technologies, the conference will cover a huge variety of potential applications as well as innovative solutions already available.


Printed Electronics USA 2011 will include a full 2 day conference, trade show, masterclasses, tours to local area companies, and an awards dinner. To find about more about the largest event on the topic or to register, please visit www.idtechex.com/peUSA.

Thursday, 7 July 2011

Event Update - Nanopolymers 2011

Nanopolymers 2011
13- 14 September 2011

Early Registration Offer – register today and save €300!

iSmithers’ third Nanopolymers conference will cover all aspects of this fascinating and rapidly developing field which is already beginning to impact on polymer users and researchers in most industry sectors. The conference aims to update producers and users involved in polymers - both for components and films - with the latest thoughts and developments which will affect them. Find out more by visiting www.polymerconferences.com

For a list of selected abstracts click here.

Register before 8 July 2011 to take advantage of the special Early Bird Discount registration fee.

Contact: Helen Charlesworth, iSmithers, email: hcharlesworth@ismithers.net

tel: +44 (0)1939 250383
fax: +44 (0)1939 251118.

Monday, 4 July 2011

Should we stay or should we go now? Nanotechnology under the microscope in the UK

Nanoco, a world leading quantum dots manufacturer, looks for governmental incentives to stay at home as it considers the location of its planned production plant. Singapore and Japan could win-out if a deal cannot be struck. Can the UK government put together a sweet tasting package for talks around the discussion table or will it all go sour?

There is no official UK government strategy for nanotechnology so it will be very interesting to see what becomes of Nanoco. Could this set a precedent for a mass exodus of nanotech innovation in the UK? No, it’s already begun with Plastic Logic.

Sunday, 3 July 2011

Will the USA ditch the National Nanotechnology Initiative?

The USA has been investing heavily in nanotechnology since 2000 when the National Nanotechnology Initiative (NNI) was launched and later this month the US Congress will examine its return on federal nanotechnology investments. Will the USA determine its investments have paid off and authorize the continuation of the NNI or will they ditch it forever? It’s apparent that the Chinese and Russians are making great strides to become the dominate players in the nanotech scene and maybe it’s too late for the Americans to catch-up no matter what they decide.