Product category:
Design Services
News Release from: Qinetiq
Edited by the Electronicstalk Editorial
Team on 12 July 2005
DTI and MoD fund printed circuit
research
Qinetiq is researching the potential for printing complete electronic circuits, including transistors, resistors and capacitors, with separate backing from both the DTI and the MoD.
Qinetiq is researching the potential for printing complete electronic circuits, including transistors, resistors and capacitors, with separate backing from both the DTI and the MoD In the consumer sector the technology being investigated could help reduce the cost of many electronic products
This article was originally published on Electronicstalk on 7 May 2004 at 8.00am (UK)
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In the defence field it could enable electronic functionality to be added to structural components of systems or to personal and protective clothing economically, with minimal increase in mechanical complexity and with negligible weight growth.
The DTI is providing funding of around GBP 200,000 for an initial two-year research programme to develop materials and processes and then look at applying the technology to large displays such as flat-screen TVs and advertising boards.
The MoD, through its Electronics Systems' research budget, is providing over GBP 750,000 for a parallel funded three-year project to investigate emerging technologies for printing electronic circuits and their consequences for defence equipment.
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Qinetiq has already shown that a soft lithography process can be used for printing the fine metal patterns needed for thin film transistors with micron detail.
This process involves creating high precision "stamps" from specialised polymers which are able to deposit carefully engineered inks with very high resolution.
The ink then binds metal selectively onto the surface to form the complex structures needed by active semiconductor components.
Connection between the active components is then achieved by using inks loaded with conductive material that are laid down using digital printing devices like commercial inkjet printers or plotters.
These research projects are based on using thin polymers, not silicon, as a semi-conductor, adding the benefits of flexibility and improved robustness to the resulting circuits.
The delivery of performance gains are not the real objective of these research programmes, rather reductions in both the cost of manufacture and the time needed to complete the design, prototyping and production cycle.
New design concepts should also be possible as the electronics could be positioned within a device in previously inaccessible areas.
"Today's large flat screen displays have a silicon switch at every pixel in order to provide a high quality image, and it is a hugely expensive process to get them all working", explained Dr Ian Sage, the project leader at Qinetiq.
"Printing the necessary electronics on the surface of the panel should be a much quicker and cheaper process which we hope will lead to larger, better and more affordable displays".
"A lot more work is needed, but the technology also offers a huge opportunity to add electronics into defence equipment quickly and at low cost".
"And we can expect to see products using printed electronics beginning to appear in the high street by the end of the decade - a good example of how technology can be developed to benefit both defence and civil markets".
The technology has a part to play in keeping down the overall weight or size of electronic systems when applied to a number of defence sector applications.
One example where the results of this research could be applied relates to the ever increasing amount of technology being added to helmets used by fast jet pilots.
The weight of the helmet is critical because high g-forces applied during flight multiply it many times, putting considerable strain on the pilot.
This technology should allow additional electronic capabilities to be added to a helmet without a significant increase in weight by printing them on the surface, rather than having to attach a separate module with heavy circuit boards and housing.
Unmanned air vehicles and battlefield communication systems are also likely defence sector candidates and, when applied to the consumer sector, the research could result in reductions in the size and cost of many electronic products and allow electronics to be added in unexpected ways, such as into fabrics or product packaging.
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