Transparent Conductive Films (TCF) 2012-2022: Forecasts, Technologies, Players
NEW YORK, June 27, 2013 /PRNewswire/ -- Reportlinker.com announces that a new market research report is available in its catalogue:
Transparent Conductive Films (TCF) 2012-2022: Forecasts, Technologies, Players
http://www.reportlinker.com/p01497399/Transparent-Conductive-Films-TCF-2012-2022-Forecasts-Technologies-Players .html#utm_source=prnewswire&utm_medium=pr&utm_campaign=Advanced_Material
This report focuses on the markets, requirements and current and emerging technologies of transparent conductors. Worldwide research and design efforts are presented, both from research institutes and companies that are developing the necessary materials and processes - in total 53 organizations are profiled. It covers metal oxides, organic materials, and emerging alternatives including inorganic meshes, carbon nanotubes, graphene and more. The penetration of these options into applications such as displays, photovoltaics and touch screens, and others, is given for the next 10 years.
The importance of Transparent Conductive Films (TCF)
Transparent conductive films are used for displays, some photovoltaics and touch screen modules. In 2012, 93% of the market uses Indium Tin Oxide (ITO) - which can be expensive depending on the current price of indium and is brittle, and barely flexible. Other metal oxides are used, particularly in some thin film photovoltaics which offer a cost advantage over ITO.
However, now there are many other emerging technologies, from finely printed conductive meshes, to layers of silver or copper that are highly transparent, to organic transparent conductors, and variations such as carbon nanotubes and graphene. This report assesses the technical progress of these options, and their market sweet spot (if any) and forecast penetration.
Each option has trade-offs between conductivity, cost, transmittance, and flexibility. Each can be patterned in different ways. While sputtering will remain an important and high-volume technology for coating of rigid substrates like glass, solution-based processes including printing and the use of organic and nanoparticle materials have already gained a lot of traction and are expected to dominate the market for the flexible applications within a few years. Significant new developments are being made with both the materials used and how they can be deposited. This report addresses the performance of the different options and profiles organizations around the world that are developing better solutions.
The biggest opportunity
The biggest opportunity has been - and for the next decade will be - for displays, but this increasingly includes a wide range of displays including OLEDs, which is now the priority of companies such as Samsung.
While ESD (electro static discharge) applications have moderate requirements concerning the properties of TCFs, demands in devices such as OLEDs are more complex. The main reason is that in that case, not only the standard properties as conductivity, cost, transmittance and flexibility are important, but the interactions with other layers play an important role, namely charge carrier injection. In addition, for large area devices, homogeneity is more critical, especially when it comes to display and lighting applications. The human eye is more sensitive to changes in brightness than to changes in colour, and brightness of an light emitting device depends on the electrical conditions - voltage in the case of inorganic electroluminescence, current flow in the case of electrochromic and light-emitting semiconductors.
This report critically assesses these issues.
Market forecasts 2012-2022
IDTechEx find that the market for TCFs will be $1.63 billion in 2012. This is the cost of the material used for the TCF, excluding the substrate and processing cost. It is based on a ground-up calculation of the material usage by each type of device, and benchmarking with results from exhaustive interviews of users and suppliers of TCFs. The report gives ten year forecasts by TCF technology, in addition to ten year forecasts of the TCF area required by application.
We study the processing cost of different options - for example, the material cost of Carbon Nanotubes (CNT) are similar to ITO but the structure of a CNT TCF is much simpler and much easier to make and therefore overall the CNT TCF, like for like, can be cheaper.
Who should buy this report?
For those that seek to address opportunities in this field, learn the latest progress from around the world, the challenges and market potential, this report is a must. Activities of more than 53 organizations from across the globe are covered.
1. EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
2. INTRODUCTION TO TRANSPARENT CONDUCTING FILMS (TCF): MATERIALS AND TECHNOLOGIES
2.1. Transparent Conductive Oxides
2.2. Organic conductors
2.3. Metal layers and grids
3. APPLICATIONS AND REQUIRED PROPERTIES OF TCFS
3.1. Electromagnetic shielding and Electrostatic coating
3.2. Displays & Lighting
3.2.1. LC Displays
3.2.2. EL Lamps and Displays
3.2.3. OLED Lighting and displays
3.3. Touch Screens
3.4. Photovoltaics
3.4.1. Crystalline Silicon
3.4.2. Thin film and Organic PV
3.5. Security Applications
4. MAIN CRITERIA OF TCFS
4.2. Transparency
4.3. Conductivity
4.4. Flexibility
4.5. Cost
4.5.1. Patterning Cost ITO vs CNTs
4.6. Other parameters
5. MATERIALS USED FOR TCFS
5.1. Doped oxide metals
5.1.1. ITO Challenges: Cost and availability
5.1.2. Evolution of pricing for ITO
5.2. Organic Conductors
5.2.1. Evolution of conductivity of transparent organic materials
5.3. Metallic nanoparticles (silver and copper)
5.4. Carbon Nanotubes and Graphene
5.4.1. Carbon Nanotubes
5.4.2. Graphene
5.5. Hybrids: Metal grids with transparent organic material
6. MANUFACTURING OF TCFS
6.1. TCOs
6.1.1. Vacuum processes
6.1.2. Wet processes
6.1.3. Patterning of TCO layers
6.1.4. Recent developments: Printable ITO
6.2. Deposition of Organic Materials
6.3. Nanomaterials
6.3.1. Metallic nanoparticles
6.3.2. CNT and Graphene
7. COMPANIES
7.1. Agfa Orgacon
7.2. Caledon Controls
7.3. Cambrios Technologies Corp.
7.4. Canatu Ltd.
7.5. Carestream Advanced Materials
7.6. Chasm Technologies
7.7. Cheil Industries
7.8. Chisso Corp.
7.9. Cima NanoTech
7.10. C3Nano
7.11. Dai Nippon Printing Co Ltd (DNP)
7.12. Dontech Inc.
7.13. Duke University
7.14. Eastman Kodak
7.15. Eikos
7.16. Evaporated Coatings Inc.
7.17. Evonik
7.18. Fujifilm Ltd
7.19. Gunze Ltd
7.20. Heraeus Clevios (formerly H.C. Starck Clevios)
7.21. Holst Center
7.22. Institute of Chemical and Engineering Sciences (ICES), Singapore
7.23. Join Well Technology Company Ltd.
7.24. KAIST
7.25. KPT Shanghai Keyan Phosphor Technology Co. Ltd.
7.26. Lee Tat Industrial Development (LTI) Ltd
7.27. LG Chem
7.28. Mianyang Prochema Plastics Co., Ltd.
7.29. Mitsui & Co. (U.S.A.), Inc., Mitsui Ltd., Japan
7.30. Nanoforge
7.31. National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology (AIST)
7.32. National University of Singapore (NUS)
7.33. Nicanti
7.34. Nitto Denko
7.35. Oike & CO., Ltd.
7.36. Panipol Ltd
7.37. Polychem UV/EB
7.38. PolyIC
7.39. Rice University
7.40. Samsung Electronics, Korea
7.41. Sang Bo Corporation (SBK), Korea
7.42. Sigma-Aldrich
7.43. Sheldahl
7.44. Sony Corporation
7.45. Sumitomo Metal Mining Co., Inc.
7.46. Suzutora
7.47. Teijin Kasei America, Inc. / Teijin Chemical
7.48. Top Nanosys
7.49. Toray Advanced Film (TAF)
7.50. Toyobo
7.51. UCLA
7.52. Unidym
7.53. University of Michigan
7.54. VisionTek Systems Ltd.
7.55. XinNano Materials, Inc., Taiwan
8. FORECASTS FOR TCF FOR FLEXIBLE ELECTRONICS 2012-2022
8.1. The potential significance of organic and printed inorganic electronics
8.2. Forecasts for flexible electronics 2012-2022
8.3. TCFs market size 2012-2022
8.4. Market by TCF Technology Type
To order this report:
Advanced_Material Industry: Transparent Conductive Films (TCF) 2012-2022: Forecasts, Technologies, Players
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