IDTechEx.com (press release) |
Non-Toxic Materials for Electronics/ Electrics: Large Emerging Markets 2018-2028
IDTechEx.com (press release) Chapter 3 appraises materials being used in 37 families of emerging devices, 18 families of compound. It tables where they are and where they will be used in volume. The chemical elements of concern in overall electronics and electrics are compared. |
Category: Electronics
Business Briefs – Marshall News Messenger
Business Briefs
Marshall News Messenger Communities In Schools of East Texas, Inc. is now recycling used electronics to help preserve the environment by keeping these harmful items out of landfills. They are partnering with Cartridges for KidsĀ® (CFK), who specializes in recycling used cell … |
Electronics recycling platform Aihuishou eyes overseas growth – ecns
Electronics recycling platform Aihuishou eyes overseas growth
ecns Earlier this year, Aihuishou made investments in Cashify, an Indian online marketplace for used smartphones and electronics, as well as Brazilian counterpart Trocafone. These partnerships would enable these target companies to learn from Aihuishou's … |
Turning silicon photonics into a new competitive asset for the electronics industry – EurekAlert (press release)
Turning silicon photonics into a new competitive asset for the electronics industry
EurekAlert (press release) With the help of silicon photonics, companies can develop increasingly compact, more efficient and more affordable products, where optical signals are used for such purposes as precise measuring, laser imaging and rapid data transfer. "Soon we will be … |
Printed metal-polymer conductors make stretchy biodevices – physicsworld.com
physicsworld.com |
Printed metal-polymer conductors make stretchy biodevices
physicsworld.com Stretchable biocompatible devices can be used in a host of medical applications, but most stretchable conductors made to date are toxic, expensive, difficult to make and break or degrade easily. A team of researchers at the National Center for … |
Material Paves Way for Electronics, Robots that Can Repair Themselves – DesignNews
DesignNews |
Material Paves Way for Electronics, Robots that Can Repair Themselves
DesignNews Researchers at Carnegie Mellon University have developed a flexible, self-healing material that can be used in wearable devices, soft robots, and numerous other applications to help electronics repair themselves. (Image source: Carnegie Mellon … |