Tech Round Up: Bitesize, by IDTechEx

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Presented by the IDTechEx Analyst Team, providing impartial market research, business intelligence and events on emerging technologies (3D Printing, Advanced Materials, Electric Vehicles, Energy Storage, Life Sciences, Off Grid & Energy Harvesting, Photonics, Printed & Flexible Electronics, RFID & t…

IDTechEx Analysts


    • Jun 7, 2021 LATEST EPISODE
    • infrequent NEW EPISODES
    • 8m AVG DURATION
    • 16 EPISODES


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    Latest episodes from Tech Round Up: Bitesize, by IDTechEx

    1000 Mile Electric Cars for Everyone

    Play Episode Listen Later Jun 7, 2021 9:04


    Some research from Dr Peter Harrop's new IDTechEx report 'Routes to 1000 Mile (1600km) Battery Electric Cars'www.IDTechEx.com/1000MileRoutes to 1000 Mile (1600km) Battery Electric Cars 2021-2041Materials opportunities, simplification, lightweighting, 3-5 photovoltaics, solid state batteries, zero-emission range extenders, supercapacitors, wide bandgap, graphene, aluminium, sun-tracking, heat pumpsFast charging is all the talk now but doubling then trebling the range is seismic. The world solves its problems by eliminating infrastructure. The 285 page IDTechEx report, "Routes to 1000 Mile (1600km) Battery Electric Cars 2021-2041" spells it out.

    User Interface Solutions for the Medical Device Marketplace

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 24, 2021 5:27


    Companies are successfully innovating as an old technology pivots quickly to tackling a global problem."COVID-19 is driving 3- and 4-digit growth for antimicrobial companies"Principal Analyst Dr Nadia Tsao joins Raghu Das, CEO of IDTechEx to discuss the new IDTechEx report "Antimicrobial Technology Market 2021-2031", www.IDTechEx.com/AntimicrobialThe COVID-19 pandemic has been one of the world's worst public health emergencies in living memory and has affected all aspects of life around the world. The pandemic has also propelled awareness of antimicrobial technology and antimicrobial products to new heights. Players in the antimicrobial technology market are developing additives and coatings to meet unprecedented demand for new antimicrobial products, with industry players seeing double-, triple-, or even quadruple-digit growth. What are antimicrobial technologies?Antimicrobial technologies, as covered in this IDTechEx report, refers to additives and coatings that decrease or even eliminate the activity of microorganisms, including bacteria, virus, and fungi. While regular cleaning can remove and kill the microorganisms present on a surface, antimicrobial technologies offer continuous protection between cleans. But even before the COVID-19 pandemic, antimicrobial technologies have been saving lives and money across a broad number of sectors. A key driver for the use of antimicrobial technologies is their ability to address hospital-acquired infections (or healthcare-associated infection). When used in healthcare facilities such as hospitals, antimicrobial technologies have been demonstrated to significantly decrease the rates of infection. By doing so, thousands if not tens of thousands of deaths can be prevented, and billions of dollars can be saved. There are many opportunities beyond the healthcare sector, including food, agriculture, aquaculture, construction (including HVAC systems), and public settings. The use of antimicrobial paints, coatings and additives in the built environment can not only extend the lifetime of the protected product, but also indirectly improve human health through addressing indoor air quality. Antimicrobial textiles can provide anti-odour effect to clothing, curtains, carpets, and soft furnishings. With the world moving against the prophylactic use of antibiotics in agriculture, antimicrobial companies are beginning to fill in the gap. And now, the COVID-19 pandemic has shed light on the importance of cleaning high-touch surfaces in public settings, and the role of antimicrobial technologies in providing safe environments for people in a post-pandemic world. What is in this report?This report takes a deep dive into key antimicrobial technologies. The mechanism of action of each antimicrobial technology is explained and a comparison of efficacy claims from companies commercializing antimicrobial technologies is provided. Profiles of both major and emerging players, including primary interviews, are included in the report. The key technologies covered in the report are:- Silver, including silver chloride, silver zeolite, silver nanoparticles- Copper, including copper oxide and copper nanoparticles- Zinc, including zinc oxide and zinc pyrithione- Silane quaternary ammonium compounds- Titanium dioxideDownload a report sample: www.IDTechEx.com/Antimicrobial

    ‘Sustainable’ Fuels: Aviation will lead demand long term

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 23, 2021 7:54


    Why sustainable diesel when electric vehicles will dominate the market? How sustainable are such ‘sustainable fuels’ really? What are the emerging technologies in this space? Senior Technology Analyst Dr Alex Holland joins Raghu Das, CEO of IDTechEx to discuss the new IDTechEx report "Sustainable Alternative Fuels 2021-2031", www.IDTechEx.com/AltFuelGrowth in global energy consumption has caused CO2 and GHG emissions to rise, in turn causing an increase in average global temperatures. The combustion of fossil fuels including coal, oil, and natural gas, has been a key driver behind this, providing the underlying driver for the production and use of non-fossil alternative fuels that can help reduce emissions and mitigate against climate change. The electrical power and transportation sectors have been first to implement renewable technologies. For electricity generation, renewable power sources such as wind and solar PV are the fastest growing energy source for many regions worldwide, reducing the carbon intensity of electricity production. In on-road transportation, the 2020s are forecast to be the decade where battery electric cars and other personal transport modes become cheaper, on both a lifetime- and upfront-cost basis, than their internal combustion engine counterparts. This will lead to widespread battery electric vehicle adoption. However, combined, electricity and on-road transportation account for less than 50% of global energy consumption and CO2 -e emissions. Sectors including heavy industry, heating, aviation, and shipping are far more difficult to decarbonize. Here, direct electrification or use of battery technology is unlikely to provide a solution. Liquid and gaseous fuels will therefore be necessary in these sectors. Renewable diesel or HVO (hydrotreated vegetable oil) for example is set for a decade of growth. Production of renewable diesel differs from conventional biodiesel, allowing it to be used as a drop-in fuel, where biodiesel will have to be blended. Further, if waste feedstocks are used, such as used cooking oil or animal fats, renewable diesel can offer significant CO2 emissions reductions and be classified as a 2nd generation or advanced biofuel. Growth in the fuel is driven by the US and Europe and emissions targets set in these regions with the report providing data on players and productions volumes and a capacity forecast (MMGY) through to 2031. This despite the backdrop of vehicle electrification. IDTechEx's report on non-fossil alternative fuels covers a wide scope of fuels, processes and sectors, and aims to provide insight on the state of the market for alternative fuels, how they fit in to a low-carbon economy, the key players and developments. The report includes an introduction to biofuels with further detailed sections on renewable diesel, advanced biofuels, sustainable aviation fuels, electro-fuels (e-fuels), and e-ammonia, providing data, trends, analysis and discussion on technology development, production volumes, company announcements, and targeted applications and sectors.Download a report sample: www.IDTechEx.com/Altfuel

    Trends in Materials for EV Batteries: More Nickel, Less Pack

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 12, 2021 7:07


    Exploring trends in the change of the cathode chemistry; EV cell energy density; reduction of battery pack materials weight; and strategies of EV auto makers. Covered by Dr James Edmondson, Technology Analyst at IDTechEx, based on market research for Materials for EV Batteries www.IDTechEx.com/EVBattMatMaterials for Electric Vehicle Battery Cells and Packs 2021-2031Material requirements for electric vehicle lithium-ion battery cells and packs. Battery cell and pack energy density, material demand trends, OEM strategies and granular market forecasts for light- and heavy-duty vehicles.By Dr James Edmondson and Dr Alex HollandAbout IDTechExIDTechEx guides your strategic business decisions through its Research, Subscription and Consultancy products, helping you profit from emerging technologies. For more information, contact research@IDTechEx.com or visit www.IDTechEx.com.Social Media Links:Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/IDTechEx LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/idtechex/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/IDTechExResearch

    Solar Vehicles at Tipping Point

    Play Episode Listen Later Feb 12, 2021 9:12


    Vehicle designers not yet considering solar bodywork are crazy. The tipping point is with us mainly because single-crystal silicon photovoltaics providing 50% more electricity per unit area is now viable even on the sides of vehicles. In all, three times as much electricity. Adoption is now so rapid that IDTechEx has rewritten its report within a year. "Solar Vehicles 2021-2041 2nd Edition" explains in 260 pages. Mostly, it covers the biggest potential - land vehicles - but it gives latest learnings on water and in the air. See how purchasers of solar on-road vehicles now have a wide choice from solar adding a few hundred kilometers yearly to total energy independence for tens of kilometers. That includes the typical city dweller doing 12,000 km yearly. Never plug in? Escape the tyranny of unreliable, over-busy charging stations with their stupidly different payment means and interfaces? Solar vehicles let you plug in if you need more range but they typically get by on half the battery, reducing problems from that troublesome component too. Suddenly the choice is huge, the sources global. The energy-independent cars range from spartan to designer cars. China offers solar vehicles ranging from golf cars to family cars and people movers but just one brand Economia in Pakistan now offers all those plus an enclosed solar trike. All are made in Pakistan. On the other side of the world, new solar cars include Aptera solar 3 wheeler claiming world record 1600km 1000 miles range on full battery. Globally, solar two seaters are now multiply-sourced. Importantly, solar bodywork is now viable for conventional, hybrid and battery vehicles. Read Hyundai's roll-out. Tesla Cybertruk has solar option demonstrated. Yes, the big names are piling in now, Toyota even working on a further leap in solar range to over 20 km yearly. Many solar boats are there already. Indeed, energy-independent solar electric boats are commonplace and some multi-mode harvesting here has lessons for land vehicles. Trucks now come centre stage with a major program on solar-assisted hybrid trucks headed by Scania, part of VW Group. Sono Motors, with the largest solar car orderbook, has just demonstrated an all-over-solar truck. Solar truck savings will double the typical profit of a trucker. Learn why Sono Motors has licensed its all-over solar technology to a leading robot shuttle maker and Dethleffs sells the format on its recreational vehicle. "Solar Vehicles 2021-2041 2nd Edition" is continuously researched by multi-lingual IDTechEx analysts worldwide. It even explains what happens when the next solar vehicle technologies become affordable on land and it scopes intermediate technologies such as CIGS and OPV being introduced on vehicles.This presentation shares some of the research from the new IDTechEx report "Solar Vehicles 2021-2041 2nd Edition". www.IDTechEx.com/Solar Solar Vehicles 2021-2041 2nd EditionEnergy independence, battery reduction, range increase, photovoltaics, scSi, CIGS, OPV, III-V, structural electronics, solar windowsVehicles, land, water, air adopt solar bodywork.By Dr Peter Harrop and Dr Matthew DysonAbout IDTechExIDTechEx guides your strategic business decisions through its Research, Subscription and Consultancy products, helping you profit from emerging technologies. For more information, contact research@IDTechEx.com or visit www.IDTechEx.com.Social Media Links:Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/IDTechEx LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/idtechex/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/IDTechExResearch

    Expect a $20+ billion market for smart vehicle and building windows, invisible electronic overlayers

    Play Episode Listen Later Jan 15, 2021 8:30


    Transparent Electronics Materials, Markets 2021-2041See-through micro-LED, OLED, QD displays, photovoltaic windows, electric darkening, RadarGlass, circuits, metamaterials, heaters, antennaswww.IDTechEx.com/TransMat Hyundai promises that some of its future electric cars will retain large roof windows but they will also make enough electricity to greatly increase range. The Chinese railways are deploying trains with windows that have interactive, light-emitting color displays visible when needed. The USA has an increasing number of farm greenhouses that let in the types of light that optimally grow plants while using the rest to make electricity. The new IDTechEx report, "Transparent Electronics Materials, Applications, Markets 2021-2041" explains. With no nostalgia or academic obscurity, it is uniquely up-to-date, comprehensive and materials and markets focused. The rapidly expanding business of transparent electronics includes transparent electrics and optronics. The transparency is achieved using transparent materials or alternatively opaque materials in patterns that let light through as with your car window antenna and demister patterns. Indeed, in Germany they are developing headlamp glass that steers to radar beam of driverless vehicles. Germans are already offering transparent heater laminate to go over the inside fitments of electric vehicles, saving weight and power, increasing range. The report has a comprehensive, easily grasped Executive Summary and Conclusions with new infograms and 29 forecasts. The Introduction presents the main aspects coming into prominence from 2021-2041. Chapters 3 and 4 analyze the many types of transparent display emerging Chapter 5 is a deep dive into transparent photovoltaics as it finds new uses and becomes multifunctional. Chapter 6 explains what is happening with see-through circuits whether using opaque material patterns with gaps or using transparent conductive layers. Chapter 7 addresses electrically darkened glass in buildings, vehicles and more. Chapter 8 covers enabling constructs in transparent electronic devices. Questions answered include:- Why are big names becoming so interested?- What are the most vibrant, growth markets for transparent electronics 2021-2041?- What materials are needed and how will they evolve?- Gaps in the market? Leading researchers showing the way?- Technical progress with transparent LCD, mini LED, micro LED, QD, OLED displays?- Emerging applications of transparent displays?- Transparent photovoltaics progress, new applications, multifunctionality?- Progress with transparent circuits - what new functionality, materials, potential?- Electrically darkening glass: progress, potential, materials?- Enablers: construction, materials, uses of barrier layers, conductive patterns?- Why will metamaterials become very important in transparent electronics? How?Further information please visit: www.IDTechEx.com/TransMat If you have any questions about this report, please do not hesitate to contact our report team at research@IDTechEx.com or call one of our sales managers:AMERICAS (USA): +1 617 577 7890ASIA (Japan): +81 3 3216 7209ASIA: +886 9 3999 9792EUROPE (UK) +44 1223 812300

    Huge Materials Opportunities in Emerging Photovoltaics

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 3, 2020 8:47


    There are huge materials opportunities in emerging photovoltaics, which I discuss in my latest short presentation (9mins in length) sharing research from my new IDTechEx report, "Materials Opportunities in Emerging Photovoltaics 2020-2040". For report information, please visit: www.IDTechEx.com/MaterialsPV Materials Opportunities in Emerging Photovoltaics 2020-2040CIGS, GaAs, lll-V compound, perovskite, OPV, CdTe, conductor, barrier, TCO, ITO, paint, transparent, flexibleBy Dr Peter Harrop, Dr Khasha Ghaffarzadeh and Dr Xiaoxi He"Nearly $40bn in 2040 sales of advanced photovoltaics beyond silicon await"New IDTechEx report, "Materials Opportunities in Emerging Photovoltaics 2020-2040" is based on interviews by multi-lingual, PhD level IDTechEx analysts across the world and 20 years tracking the research and applications. Nearly $40 billion dollars envisaged in 2040 without colliding with commoditised silicon-in-glass "power station" business. Much premium-pricing of specialist materials. See why profit from emerging PV will be disproportionately high - up to half the profit from all PV in 2040. Learn why over $10,000/W is currently paid for record 30% efficient lll-V compound PV in a designer watch, as an array on a satellite or surface of a high-altitude drone and lll-V is the basis of Toyota's solar car development. Tripled-efficiency indoor "lll-V" PV is newly on sale. Organic PV has jumped in efficiency, adding other uniques for other segments. Understand how copper-indium-gallium-diselenide PV created $2 billion yearly sales in only ten years. Further stellar growth powered by what improved materials? Most emerging PV is thin film, flexible and some will be stretchable materials. Tightly-rollable PV in your mobile phone, aircraft skin, billions of Internet of Things nodes? Hundreds of millions more building facades need lightweight PV. What three technologies for PV paint? Retrofit on windows, boats, buses? Whisper it quietly, but with silicon near its theoretical limits and taking massive areas of real estate - often prime agricultural land and lakes - emerging PV will eventually compete with some "power station" silicon by affordably providing the power in half the area and therefore being much more widely deployable and environmentally acceptable but this report is mainly about the huge opportunities in the run up to that. The 206 page IDTechEx report, "Materials Opportunities in Emerging Photovoltaics" has executive summary and conclusions sufficient for busy people. Absorb 18 primary conclusions, 2020-2040 forecasts, roadmaps, price sensitivity, learning curves projected forward, gaps in the market, the application hierarchy. The introduction reveals the amazing virtuosity of PV already, important parameters, SOFT report, PV architectures, efficiency trends. New infograms compare PV options beyond silicon, production readiness, 13 examples of new formats/ locations, progress to user-customised PV materials, PV combinations.For more information on this report, please visit www.IDTechEx.com/MaterialsPV or for the full portfolio of research available from IDTechEx please visit www.IDTechEx.com/research.

    New Materials Make Supercapacitors Better than Batteries

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 26, 2020 8:38


    A short (8min) presentation on how "New Materials Make Supercapacitors Better than Batteries", sharing some of the research from Dr Peter Harrop's new IDTechEx report, "Supercapacitor Materials and Formats 2020-2040". www.IDTechEx.com/SCMatsSupercapacitor Materials and Formats 2020-2040Including graphene, CNT, MOF, CNF, electrolytes. Formats include structural, flexible, wearableBy Dr Peter Harrop and Dr Richard CollinsIDTechEx report, "Supercapacitor Materials and Formats 2020-2040" reveals why Toyota, Volkswagen, the $100bn CRRC in China and other giants now see supercapacitors as a potentially large market and key enabling technology in their cars, buses and so on. Materials will control supercapacitor performance and cost.Supercapacitors will have formats such as stretchable, where batteries struggle. They also meet batteries head on, promising energy density of lithium-ion batteries 12 years ago with most other parameters magnitudes better than even future batteries. Imagine a supercapacitor bus, that only needs to charge at the depot, doing it in seconds with no end-of-life disposal costs.The trick is pivoting of supercapacitor research from flammable carcinogenic liquids touching burnt coconut shells to such things as solid ionogels matched to graphene and carbon nanotube composites. That takes life beyond the current three times that of a lithium-ion battery to much more. An electric vehicle will have energy storage taking no weight or space because it has supercapacitor smart vehicle bodywork by Lamborghini, Geely, MIT, Imperial College London, a Japanese electronics giant and others optimising, integrating and shaping the new materials. Add non-toxic flexible and stretchable medical implants and patches, some using supercapacitor feedstock cut to shape as needed.Only this report appraises and forecasts those advanced materials in supercapacitors and derivatives. Analysis by multi-lingual, PhD level IDTechEx staff includes much from 2020. See percentage of new research on hierarchical vs exohedral electrodes, graphene vs CNT vs metal-oxide-framework MOF electrodes. Understand challenges and opportunities of battery-supercapacitor-hybrid BSH vs pseudocapacitors, scope for increasing energy density, trade-offs of other parameters, with appraisal from university professors and IDTechEx experts deeply involved.This 220 page report is sister to the IDTechEx report, "Supercapacitors: Applications, Players, Markets 2020-2040". It covers present and future and how new materials and formats will create large new business. The 19 page executive summary and conclusions is sufficient in itself for those in a hurry - mainly new infograms, technology comparisons, summary of commercially significant research, 20 year technology roadmap, materials value market forecast and gaps in the materials market.The introduction explains cost and weight split, power density and frequency compromises to increase energy density. Understand the toolkit available in supercapacitor, BSH and pseudocapacitance optimisation, research methodologies, parameters to be improved to create large business and production processes emerging.

    Electronics Reshaped: Smart Materials Bypassing the Traditional Industry

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 20, 2020 7:00


    Learn about electronics as smart materials bypassing the traditional industry.Electronics Reshaped 2020-2040 www.IDTechEx.com/ElectronicsReshaped"A Multibillion dollar new opportunity for value added materials suppliers" Reconfigurable, edit-able electrically-multifunctional paint, ink, reels, stretchable, structural, 3D printing, energy storage, energy harvesting, circuitsBy Dr Peter Harrop, Dr Richard Collins and Raghu DasImagine buying sticky tape that makes, stores and uses electricity for its sensing, lighting and other functions. Cut off the shape you need and press it in the right place to switch on the features you need. It does not matter if you never use some features. Welcome to the world of edit-able smart materials as electronics and electrics in the new 150 page IDTechEx report, "Electronics Reshaped 2020-2040" Buy electrically smart material you feed into your 3D printer then make whatever structure you wish. No need for a case. Squeeze your squashy battery, cut your supercapacitor or self-powered sensing and lighting into awkward spaces. Apply programmably-stretchable electronics sheet, the area determining several electrical parameters. Morphing electrical materials anyone? Enjoy photovoltaic and paint you apply when and where you wish, the thickness determining the performance. Thermoelectric paint is coming. IDTechEx looked at 63 research programs. The majority target apparel/textile and medical/healthcare industries; then building/campus/home, then many other sectors. It will delight the added value materials suppliers and horrify the traditional electronics and electrical engineering industries where they are bypassed. The trend is seen in 2.2 GW of thin film solar being installed in 2020 because this copper indium gallium diselenide is flexible and light-weight for building facades etc. Renovagen will even sell you 300kW reels to unroll like a carpet and use as a microgrid. Electrics and electronics become added-value materials. Research groups have demonstrated batteries, sensors and triboelectric harvesting you cut to shape and they still work. Customizable, fabric-like power sources can be cut, folded or stretched without losing function. Perovskite and quantum dot photovoltaics show promise for photovoltaic paint. In many cases, the new technologies are not just edit-able, they replace other functions from load-bearing parts to regular paint and building cladding - two or three for the price, space, weight of one. That can justify high margins. Industrial supply chains are being bypassed, parts are being eliminated and value-added material companies see huge opportunities ahead for this electrically-smart feedstock, reels and paint. Where they sell electrical ink to the start of traditional production lines, they will sell cleverer versions direct to many other industries.For more information on this report, please visit www.IDTechEx.com/ElectronicsReshaped or for the full portfolio of research available from IDTechEx please visit www.IDTechEx.com/Research.

    Skin analysis technologies: from the lab to the home

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 17, 2020 7:01


    Dr Nadia Tsao and Raghu Das share some of the research from the new IDTechEx report, "Skin Sensors 2020- 2030: Technologies, Markets, Players, Forecasts", www.IDTechEx.com/SkinSensors Skin Sensors 2020- 2030: Technologies, Markets, Players, ForecastsSensors for quantitative measurement of skin hydration, wrinkles, fine lines, pores, sebum, elasticity, etc. Opportunities in cosmetics and skincare, including smart retail, e-commerce, hyper-personalization, quantified-self, real-world data, and moreSkin sensors are routinely used in the cosmetics industry, playing essential roles in studies of safety and efficacy. However, despite the importance of and public focus on skin health and appearance, skin sensor technologies have rarely spilled over into wider use by the public. For example, though consumers moisturize their skin, and some even use anti-wrinkle cream, few people utilize moisture sensors to measure their skin hydration, nor do they measure changes in their wrinkles. With the shrinking of electronics and the advancement of smartphones and smartphone cameras, the availability of skin sensors is now spreading.Digital disruption has reached the cosmetics industry, and companies are seeking ways to augment or even replace their retail counters with digital solutions. This process has been accelerated by the COVID-19 pandemic, which has already forced the closure of retailers, spas, etc. for several months. While online sales can bridge some of the gap, there is still a long way to go - traditionally, less than 10% of sales in the cosmetic industry come from online. To drive online sales, software services such as virtual try-on and skin analysis have been developed to provide similar education and product recommendation services of a brick and mortar store. Such technologies have been demonstrated to increase conversion rates and basket sizes.Skin sensors for analysis of moisture, wrinkles, sebum, color, etc. can take many different forms such as cameras, probes, smart mirrors, films, facial imaging booths, smart phone accessories, and more.In tandem with digitization comes the demand for personalization. Consumers are increasingly dissatisfied with existing skin analysis solutions and look to electronics, gadgets, and even genetic tests to provide quantifiable results using scientific measurements. Furthermore, an emerging trend is hyper-personalized skin care, which can range between bespoke bottles formulated for a specific person, daily customized skin care based on current skin condition and local weather, to 3D face masks that address specific problem areas on the face. Such products invariably rely on skin sensors to measure parameters such as skin moisture, wrinkles, sebum, elasticity, redness, dark spots, and more to provide the necessary data for personalization.For more information on this report, please visit www.IDTechEx.com/SkinSensors or for the full portfolio of related research available from IDTechEx please visit www.IDTechEx.com/research.IDTechEx guides your strategic business decisions through its Research, Consultancy and Event products, helping you profit from emerging technologies. For more information on IDTechEx Research and Consultancy, contact research@IDTechEx.com or visit www.IDTechEx.com.

    Feeding the World with Genetic Technologies: Technologies and Policies

    Play Episode Listen Later Jul 28, 2020 9:39


    Dr Michael Dent shares some of the research from the brand new IDTechEx report, "Genetic Technologies in Agriculture 2020-2030".For more information on this report, please visit www.IDTechEx.com/GeneticAgriThe report assesses the following:- Selective breeding and computational strategies used to improve efficacy- Mutagenesis strategies- Genetically modified organisms (GMOs): transgenics and cisgenics- Genome editing: CRISPR, TALENs and ZFNs- CRISPR: IP issues and potential consequences- Synthetic biology in crop agriculture- The global regulatory landscape- Consumer factors in the uptake of genetic technologies in agriculture- The future of genetic technologies in agriculture: 10-year forecasts by technology and by region The report is based on extensive research into the sector, including analysis and data from over 20 companies, including Bayer (including Monsanto), BASF, Syngenta (ChemChina), Corteva Agriscience, Calyxt, Ginkgo Bioworks, Pivot Bio, and AgBiome.For more information on this report, please visit www.IDTechEx.com/GeneticAgri or for the full portfolio related research available from IDTechEx please visit www.IDTechEx.com/Research.IDTechEx guides your strategic business decisions through its Research, Consultancy and Event products, helping you profit from emerging technologies. For more information on IDTechEx Research and Consultancy, contact research@IDTechEx.com or visit www.IDTechEx.com.

    Conductive Inks: Where are the Opportunities

    Play Episode Listen Later Jul 27, 2020 11:03


    What’s hot in the conductive ink market? How is it changing? Where is the growth coming from? Watch our Q&A session with IDTechEx analyst Dr Ghaffarzadeh.For more information on this report, please visit www.IDTechEx.com/Ink or for the full portfolio of related research available from IDTechEx please visit www.IDTechEx.com/research.IDTechEx guides your strategic business decisions through its Research, Consultancy and Event products, helping you profit from emerging technologies. For more information on IDTechEx Research and Consultancy, contact research@IDTechEx.com or visit www.IDTechEx.com.

    Market and Technology Insights Covering Radar and LIDAR.

    Play Episode Listen Later Jul 24, 2020 20:27


    Radar uptake in vehicles will continue its increase, driven both by an increase in the number of adopting cars and by the radar content per vehicle. Both trends are driven by the increasing adoption of ADAS and will be sustained and strengthened in the longer term by the emergence of highly automated or autonomous driving.For deeper details and insights, we refer you to the IDTechEx report, "Automotive Radar 2020-2040: Devices, Materials, Processing, AI, Markets, and Players". This report develops a comprehensive technology roadmap, examining the technology at the levels of materials, semiconductor technologies, packaging techniques, antenna array, and signal processing/AI.To learn more about lidars please see the IDTechEx report, "Lidar 2020-2030: Technologies, Players, Markets & Forecasts". This is the most comprehensive and authoritative report on the topic.IDTechEx guides your strategic business decisions through its Research, Consultancy and Event products, helping you profit from emerging technologies. For more information on IDTechEx Research and Consultancy, contact research@IDTechEx.com or visit www.IDTechEx.com.

    Energy Harvesting for Electronic Devices

    Play Episode Listen Later Jul 22, 2020 8:47


    "Passing $2bn by 2030, energy harvesting modules become key to smartwatches, IoT and more" IDTechEx Chairman, Dr Peter Harrop shares some of the research from IDTechEx report: "Energy Harvesting for Electronic Devices 2020-2040Materials, self-charging device opportunities, technology roadmaps, forecasts"For more information on this report, please visit www.IDTechEx.com/EHDev for the full portfolio of related research available from IDTechEx please visit www.IDTechEx.com/ResearchIDTechEx guides your strategic business decisions through its Research, Consultancy and Event products, helping you profit from emerging technologies. For more information on IDTechEx Research and Consultancy, contact research@IDTechEx.com or visit www.IDTechEx.com.

    Li-ion Battery Recycling: A $5.9Billion market by 2030

    Play Episode Listen Later Jul 21, 2020 9:56


    IDTechEx CEO, Raghu Das interviews Dr Alex Holland & Dr Na Jiao, PhD on Li-ion Battery Recycling.For more information on the topic, please visit: www.IDTechEx.com/LiRecycling For the full portfolio of research available from IDTechEx please visit www.IDTechEx.com/research. IDTechEx guides your strategic business decisions through its Research, Consultancy and Event products, helping you profit from emerging technologies. For more information on IDTechEx Research and Consultancy, contact research@IDTechEx.com or visit www.IDTechEx.com.

    Sensors With Electrical Output: Technology, Materials, Uses & Forecasts

    Play Episode Listen Later Jul 20, 2020 5:05


    Join IDTechEx Chairman, Dr Peter Harrop in this 8-minute presentation on Sensors, discussing patents, the effect of COVID19, sensor market drivers in construction, agriculture, agritech, mining, military, aerospace, consumer electronics, medtech, automotive & rail.For information on the report, please visit: www.IDTechEx.com/Sense IDTechEx guides your strategic business decisions through its Research, Consultancy and Event products, helping you profit from emerging technologies. For more information on IDTechEx Research and Consultancy, contact research@IDTechEx.com or visit www.IDTechEx.com.

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