Printed Electronics Forecasts
• Photovoltaics such as CIGS, DSSC and OPV account for a market of $0.41 Billion in 2009, but this is not the full picture. CdTe and aSi photovoltaics, which are not printed today, are now a substantial market in rigid form and both have been demonstrated to be printed and/or flexible.
• The number of new companies getting involved is quickly increasing. At least 2250 organizations are working on the topic. This includes academic institutes as well as companies - roughly a 50-50 split.
Of the total market in 2009, 35% of these electronics will be predominately printed. Initially photovoltaics, OLEDs (on glass) and e-paper displays grow rapidly, followed by thin film transistor circuits, flexible OLEDs, sensors and batteries. By 2019 the market will be worth $57.2 Billion, with 76% printed and 73% on flexible substrates.
The market for e-paper displays will be $80 million this year for the front plane material, but the value of the products that use the technology is much higher - to date displays have been used in over $1 billion worth of products. With 14 e-readers now available and successes such as the display on Esquire magazine in 2008, interest in this technology is booming.
In some sectors commercialization is still embryonic. More applications are sought for thin film batteries to repeat the success of the Estee Lauder skin patch, which incorporated a battery and sells millions yearly. Here the selling point is flexibility, the price is still one magnitude higher than the more powerful ubiquitous coin cell batteries, but as other thin film components commercialize the ease of integration is changing this prospect.
Most developers of thin film transistors have slipped target commercialization dates, but this year we see the first products being sold; PolymerVision, launching flexible displays based on organic transistors and Kovio launching RFID tags using a printed inorganic semiconductor.