Sponsor


Market for organic electronics materials to reach $15.8 billion by 2015

December 19, 2007

GLEN ALLEN, Va., 19 Dec. 2007. The market for organic electronics materials will be worth $4.9 billion in 2012, and surge to $15.8 billion in 2015, according analysts at NanoMarkets in Glen Allen, Va.

The NanoMarkets predictions are in the firm's report, "Organic Harvest: Opportunities in Organic Electronic Materials," which analyzes the market for the semiconductors, conductors, dielectrics, and substrates in the organic electronics industry.

By 2015, NanoMarkets estimates that 80 percent of organic electronics materials will be sold into three applications: RFID, display backplanes, and OLED lighting and displays. By then RFID will be the largest application accounting for $6.9 billion in materials sales, with today's dominant application - OLEDs accounting for $5.6 billion. NanoMarkets expect RFID to overtake OLEDs as the largest consumer of organic electronics materials by 2012.

Today's organic semiconductor materials are inadequate for the opportunity that lies ahead. Besides their limits on performance, many of them are only available in small quantities. However, NanoMarkets believes that kinds of organic semiconductor materials such as rubrene and hybrid materials including formulations with carbon nanotubes are going to enable the market to achieve $4.9 billion in revenues by 2015 as needed improvements in electron mobilities, switching speeds and environmental stability are attained.

To be successful, organic electronics will have to emulate the traditional semiconductor industry and invent an organic version of CMOS with its own stable materials sets. To make this happen materials companies must offer commercial quantities of n-type semiconductors and organic dielectrics.

The substrate business will grow to $6.9 billion in sales by 2015 with the majority of these substrates of the flexible type and specially prepared for organic electronics through novel forms of barrier coatings and reduced surface roughness.

As the organic electronics industry starts to ship devices in quantity, material suppliers will have to adjust their formulations for their offerings to work in large-scale manufacturing plants. These plants now seem more likely to use versions of traditional evaporation, coating and flexo printing, rather than the much touted ink-jet approaches. Suppliers will have to meet the specialized requirements for viscosity, volatility, etc., that the emerging organic electronics industry will require.

For more information contact NanoMarkets online at www.nanomarkets.net.

Social Media Tools

Sponsored by:
Recommend this Article Recommend this Article () You Recommended this Article You Recommended this Article ()

REPRINTS: Is your company featured in this article? Click here to purchase reprints.


Most Popular Articles

Webcasts

On Demand

DO-178C: The Evolution of Software Technology in Safety

This webinar will examine the impact these supplements will have on certifiable aircraft software development, the developers and the processes which are used.

Sponsored by:

Small Form Factor

Join Military & Aerospace Electronics for an insightful Webcast on small form factor systems and components, including the benefits that SFF innovations hold for current and future mil-aero applications....

VPX for Unmanned Systems

Join us for this webcast as we hear from VITA and industry experts on the latest developments in VPX technology.

Mil & Aero Magazine

February 2012
Volume 23, Issue 2

M&AE Article Archives

Close this offer Close
Military & Aerospace Electronics Defense Executive Ebedded Computing Report Avionics Intelligence
Subscribe
FREE Newsletters from the Aerospace & Defense Media Group
Required field
Required field
Required field
I would like to receive the following e-mail newsletters
Military & Aerospace Electronics Weekly Yes No Required field
Defense Executive Yes No Required field
Embedded Computing Report Yes No Required field
Avionics Intelligence Yes No Required field
In order to subscribe, you must select at least one newsletter above.
No Thanks. No Thanks