Flexible screens ready to roll
Tuesday, 20 January, 2004
In the future, powering up your laptop may require you unroll it first. Engineers at the University of Toronto have constructed flexible technology that could lay the groundwork for future generations of bendable television, computer and mobile phone screens.
Zheng-Hong Lu, a professor in U of T's Department of Materials Science and Engineering, working with post-doctoral fellow Sijin Han and engineering science student Brian Fung, developed FOLEDs made on a variety of lightweight, flexible materials ranging from transparent plastic films to reflective metal foils that can bend or roll into any shape.
Foled technology could be manufactured using a low-cost, high efficiency mass production method, Lu says. The team, which is already commercialising some related technology, hopes a marketable device could be created within two to three years.
Power electronics market set to grow
After two years of stagnancy, the power semiconductor devices market is set to prosper, according...
Faster multicore chips
Computer chips' clocks have stopped getting faster. To keep delivering performance...
Extreme-temperature electronics
Many industries are calling for electronics that can operate reliably in a harsh environment,...