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- Silver Inks And Pastes in the PV Sector Will Decline from a Value of $4.9 Billion in 2013 to About $3.4 Billion in 2020. Amid the Gloom, However, There are Some Good News
Silver Inks And Pastes in the PV Sector Will Decline from a Value of $4.9 Billion in 2013 to About $3.4 Billion in 2020. Amid the Gloom, However, There are Some Good News
- By Electronics.ca Research Network
- Published January 17, 2013
- Organic and Printed Electronics
ATR-Newswire (Press Release) - Jan 17, 2013 - ELECTRONICS.CA PUBLICATIONS, the electronics industry market research and knowledge network, announces the availability of a new report entitled "The Silver Inks and Pastes Market 2013-2020 ". The report quantifies the opportunities for printed silver in electronics
applications over the next eight years. While the industry will continue to
drag from declining demand from the solar industry, NanoMarkets still sees
opportunities for silver inks and pastes manufacturers both in traditional thick
film markets as well as emerging display, lighting and electronics
markets.
This report analyzes the opportunities for silver inks and pastes in all the relevant, major markets for printed silver circuitry, including PV, displays, lighting, RFIDs, sensors, and the traditional thick film applications. The report also discusses the product development and marketing strategies of some of the leading suppliers of silver inks and pastes, including DIC/Sun Chemical, DuPont, Ferro, Harima Chemical, Henkel, Heraeus, Ink-Tec, Methode, and others. Finally, the report includes a detailed eight-year forecasts for the materials in both volume and value terms and broken out by application, by ink/paste type (high-firing vs. low-temperature curing products), by ink/past composition (nanosilver vs. conventional silver), and by printing method (screen-printing, ink-jet, and other methods).
Conventional photovoltaics (PV) are extremely cost-sensitive and expensive silver circuitry is increasingly being replaced with cheaper alternatives, especially in backside PV Metallization. NanoMarkets projects that silver inks and pastes in the PV sector will decline from a value of $4.9 billion in 2013 to about $3.4 billion in 2020. Amid the gloom, however, there are some good news:
This report analyzes the opportunities for silver inks and pastes in all the relevant, major markets for printed silver circuitry, including PV, displays, lighting, RFIDs, sensors, and the traditional thick film applications. The report also discusses the product development and marketing strategies of some of the leading suppliers of silver inks and pastes, including DIC/Sun Chemical, DuPont, Ferro, Harima Chemical, Henkel, Heraeus, Ink-Tec, Methode, and others. Finally, the report includes a detailed eight-year forecasts for the materials in both volume and value terms and broken out by application, by ink/paste type (high-firing vs. low-temperature curing products), by ink/past composition (nanosilver vs. conventional silver), and by printing method (screen-printing, ink-jet, and other methods).
Conventional photovoltaics (PV) are extremely cost-sensitive and expensive silver circuitry is increasingly being replaced with cheaper alternatives, especially in backside PV Metallization. NanoMarkets projects that silver inks and pastes in the PV sector will decline from a value of $4.9 billion in 2013 to about $3.4 billion in 2020. Amid the gloom, however, there are some good news:
- Silver’s
superior conductivity and compatibility with low-temperature processing means
that it is hard to replace in many applications, including traditional
applications for printed silver in the thick film electronics market.
Traditional thick-film applications for printed silver will use $2.4 billion
worth of silver inks and pastes in 2013, and this sector will grow to a value of
about $3.4 billion by 2020.
- In addition, the ongoing megatrend
toward miniaturization of electronic circuitry means that manufacturers will be
looking for higher value-added inks that target specific, new niches. This trend
will lead to increasing opportunities for higher resolution printing inks
designed for Deposition by ink-jet, flexographic, gravure, and other printing
methods. While the market in 2013 for silver inks is expected to a modest $260
million, the value could grow to well over $1 billion by the end of the
decade.
- Finally, several new sectors may turn out to be big users of printed silver circuitry. Possibilities are flexible displays – perhaps still three to five years away – but also OLED lighting, which could turn into a big user of silver if the technology takes off as expected, and the sensors market, which is growing as part of the ubiquitous electronics trend that seeks to create a world of pervasive computing and an “Internet-of-Things.”
Details of the new report, table of contents and ordering information can be found on Electronics.ca Publications' web site. View the report: The Silver Inks and Pastes Market 2013-2020.