Country for PR: United Kingdom
Contributor: PR Newswire Europe
Tuesday, January 21 2020 - 05:43
AsiaNet
Printed Electronics Europe: The Opportunities are Coming Thick and Fast
CAMBRIDGE, England, Jan. 21, 2020 /PRNewswire-AsiaNet/ --

There is dramatic change in some industries, with leading printed electronics 
vendors moving quickly to capitalize on the new sought after capabilities. 
These opportunities will be addressed at the Printed Electronics Europe 
[http://www.printedelectronicseurope.com/] exhibition and conference in Berlin 
on 13 – 14 May (register [http://www.printedelectronicseurope.com/] by 23 
January to save 40%). 

Flexible and Printed Electronics in Mobility

Take for example vehicles, which are moving increasingly away from using 
internal combustion engines (ICE) to electric drive systems, the shift 
occurring at faster rates than many had expected. The move to electric drive 
systems offers many opportunities for those in printed electronics. For 
example, power semiconductors will be used over conventional silicon integrated 
circuits to handle the higher power transfer, resulting in a need for more 
appropriate semiconductor packaging materials to dissipate the heat. Silver 
nanoparticle materials and graphene are already in use by Tesla and Ford 
respectively today.

Car dashboards are becoming increasingly integrated, with automotive giants 
investing heavily in In-Mold Electronics (IME), a printed electronics sector 
growing from virtually nothing to a billion dollar segment in a few years. The 
€17Bn automotive parts supplier Faurecia forecast a EUR 2.9 billion market for 
printed electronics in vehicles by 2025, announced at an IDTechEx Printed 
Electronics [http://www.printedelectronicseurope.com/] event in 2019. The 
functional ink and material providers have rallied behind the opportunity.

Flexible and Printed Electronics in Healthcare

Another changing sector is healthcare, with disease prevention a key focus of 
the global burgeoning healthcare system. In decline is the market (at least by 
value) for glucose test strips, in part because of the cumbersome process and 
pain involved in regularly drawing a blood sample. Rising instead is the use of 
electronic skin patches to monitor the human condition continuously. In other 
sectors heart rate monitors are also seeing a shift from the uncomfortable and 
bulky wired systems to systems that are skin-like. 

From large area skin electrodes to making thinner, more comfortable sensing 
patches, vendors in materials and systems within the printed electronics 
industry are deep into product development while others have already enabled a 
range of commercial electronic skin patch products, a market which will grow to 
$20 billion in 2029.

Flexible and Printed Electronics in Consumer Electronics

Then there is consumer electronics. 5G will result in less reliance on 
problematic wired broadband and it will enable new services and applications 
thanks to the faster data transfer capability. However, the higher frequencies 
that are increasingly employed to achieve this mean that more shielding is 
required at an IC package level, with spray-on or print-on electromagnetic 
interference (EMI) solutions in trials now, thanks to printed electronics. 

Or how about the need to differentiate the tired old phone and tablet format. 
Foldable displays anyone? For sure it's not easy but then those who crack the 
hardest challenges may be set to win big. IDTechEx sees the flexible/foldable 
display marketing growing substantially, in parallel to display technologies 
beyond OLED making an impact - such as quantum dots and microLED displays, in 
parallel again to the printed display scene which has quietly seen drastic 
material and process improvements and is now going for prime time with products 
on the market.

From material opportunities in electric vehicles to electronics skin patches in 
healthcare to new form factors of electronics in consumer devices; these are 
among the topics covered at Printed Electronics Europe 
[http://www.printedelectronicseurope.com/]; the conference, showcase and 
exhibition of the printed and flexible electronics industry, to be held on 
13-14 May in Berlin, Germany. 

2,500 attendees, over 250 speakers and over 200 exhibitors will converge at the 
event, which focuses on the business of printed electronics – with key OEMs and 
value chain participants moving the industry forward. 

Register by 23 January 2020 to receive the 40% attendee discount. Meet the 
industry and progress your growth opportunities in the sector. Learn more at 
www.PrintedElectronicsEurope.com. 

Photo - 
https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1079331/Printed_Electronics_Europe_1.jpg 
Photo - 
https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1079332/Printed_Electronics_Europe_2.jpg 
Photo - 
https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1079333/Printed_Electronics_Europe_3.jpg 

Media Contact: 
Jessica Abineri 
Marketing Coordinator 
press@IDTechEx.com 
+44-(0)1223-812300

Source: Printed Electronics Europe
Translations

Japanese