Solar technologies have generated tremendous interest among the public and investors alike, and the allure is understandable: the ability to harness the sun’s energy offers unlimited clean power.
The goal, then, is to be able to gather this power efficiently at a reasonable cost. Typically, solar cells are costly, but if a way could be found to mass produce these cells, there could be fast growth in the market. This is where printing comes into play.
It is becoming apparent that flexible thin-film photovoltaic (PV) cells can be used to collect solar energy at a fraction of the cost of present technologies. A wide variety of companies are in the market: United Solar Ovonic (a wholly-owned subsidiary of Energy Conversion Devices Inc.), Global Solar, First Solar, Nanosolar, Konarka, Solopower, HelioVolt, Miasole, Daystar and Evergreen Solar are just a few of the companies in this growing fiel
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Stay ahead of the fast growing field of flexible and printed electronics, an emerging industry that promises to revolutionize the methods in which electronic components and systems are manufactured. Flexible and printed electronics covers smart packaging and labels, sensors and wearables, solar cells, displays and lighting, batteries, medical devices, military equipment, and much more.
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