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Printed, Flexible And Organic Electronics Intelligence Services

Printed Electronics is one of the fastest growing technologies in the world. It is of vital interest to industries as diverse as consumer goods, healthcare, mobility, electronics, media and architecture.
It is allowing electronics to be used in places it has never been before - creating new products; and it is improving existing electronics and electrics, by either replacing some components or films with cheaper, more robust, higher performance alternatives, or completely replacing existing devices, such as OLED displays replacing LCD displays.

Applications offer significant opportunity for non-commodity high value chemicals, manufacture equipment and electronic and electrical components. Companies in commodity products have the opportunity to offer high value products such as substrates, barriers, or electronics-enabled products to new customers. Over 3,000 organizations are pursuing this opportunity including printing, electronics, materials and packaging companies.

The sector comprises of a diverse range of enabling technologies at different stages of commercialization. It has created several multi-billion dollar industries within the past few years (OLED displays, e-readers and conductive ink for many diverse applications). There are many components and materials which have yet to be commercialized but they are progressing from labs to production. Inevitably, some will fail.

The benefits of these new electronics are numerous - ranging from lower cost, improved performance, flexibility, transparency, stretchability, reliability, better environmental credentials and much more.


Companies that seek to profit in this sector need to:

  • understand market requirements, or how the technology can be applied to their products
  • de-risk investment by identification of the most desirable materials / equipment / components across many applications
  • know areas of oversupply and undersupply
  • have clear quantification of the opportunity at each part of the supply chain
  • identify and assess companies throughout the value chain for potential
  • partnership, acquisition and customer/client collaboration
  • refer to successful (and failing) business models stay appraised of latest global trends, what is coming next, and what it means with impartial insight

Topics covered: Printed & Flexible Electronics

Enabling materials and manufacturing processes…

Enabling materials and manufacturing processes…
  • Metallic ink (silver, copper, nickel, gold, etc.); flake, nanoparticle, nanowire
  • Organic semiconductors
  • Inorganic semiconductors (liquid silicon, metal oxides, Ga)
  • Dielectrics
  • Carbon nanotubes, graphene
  • Conductive polymers
  • Glass, polymer and steel substrates
  • Indium, ITO, ATO
  • Flexible barrier films, adhesives, encapsulants (water/oxygen barriers)
  • Quantum dot materials
  • Printing processes (inkjet, gravure, flexo, screen, roto-screen, dip pen nanolithography, lithography)
  • Vacuum deposition, spin coating, ALD, CVD, sputtering
  • Sintering, curing (photonic, heat, UV, IR)
…creating these devices…
  • Thin Film Transistor Circuits (TFTs)
  • Memory
  • Displays (OLED, e-paper, electrochromic, electrowetting, electroluminescent)
  • Lighting (OLED, LED)
  • Sensors (photo dectectors, temperature, pressure, bioelectronic etc)
  • Photovoltaics (CdTe, CIGS, DSSC, OPV)
  • Batteries, supercapacitors
  • Transparent conductive films
  • Actuators and haptics
  • RFID
  • New Products
  • Stretchable electronics
  • Touch screens
…being exploited by these industries
  • Electronics
  • Printing
  • Chemical
  • Plastics
  • Packaging
  • Paper
  • Healthcare
  • Consumer Goods
  • Consumer Electronics
  • Aerospace and Military
  • Media & Advertising
  • Architecture & the Built Environment
  • Land, Sea and Air Mobility
View Printed & Flexible Electronics Timeline

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