Abstract
Activity in Europe assessed
The new electronics has even greater potential than today' s silicon based
technology. This is because it tackles a wider range of opportunities, from
wide area displays to lowest cost power generation and smart packaging. This
organic and printed electronics is growing to become a $300 billion market in
2028 and, in 2008 alone, many factories come on stream to make "post silicon"
transistors, displays and solar cells. They are using thin films of both
organic and inorganic compounds and, increasingly, printing, because that
gives greater output, larger areas and lower cost.
Most of the action is taking place in East Asia, Europe and North America, so
IDTechEx has prepared the world' s first in depth reports on the companies,
technologies and trends involved in each of these regions. To be
comprehensive, they include all those thin film technologies beyond silicon
that are not yet printed but may be printed in due course.
Answers to your questions
This is the world' s first and only report analysing the subject in depth. It
compares and analyses the activities of 280 organisations in 19 European
countries by technology and region. It gives full contact details of these
organisations and, where appropriate, examples of patenting performance,
research programs, products and scientific papers presented in 2008 onwards.
It is intended for company executives, investors, researchers, developers,
regulators and others in the field or intending to participate in this huge
opportunity. It is an invaluable first call for those building customer lists,
seeking partners or acquisitions and assessing present and future competition.
It covers all printed and potentially printed electronics and electrics,
whether organic or inorganic, because only that gives the full picture.
In which regions and technologies is Europe strong? Where is government
support greatest and most consistent and what technology is it for? Is the
huge academic effort leading to enough start ups being created? How can things
be improved? Is most of the work in Europe on transistors, sensors, batteries,
electroluminescent displays, RFID or what? Where is Europe likely to win and
where will it lose? How do the types of activity compare by number of
projects? Who is acquiring whom and why? It is all here.
Most of the action is taking place in East Asia, Europe and North America, so
IDTechEx has prepared the world' s first in depth reports on the companies,
technologies and trends involved in each of these regions, the others being
Organic and Printed Electronics in North America and Organic and Printed
Electronics in East Asia.
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