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Start the Presses: Printable Circuits Nearly Ready

akookieone writes: "MIT Tech Review has an article on Rolltronics (first appearing in /. a year ago). Seems they can now print circuits 10 micrometers across, and are thinking they could 'very shortly' move from R&D to production."

3 of 101 comments (clear)

  1. Re:The next step by Alsee · · Score: 3, Informative

    printing a whole computer rather than just printing a CPU and soldering it in.

    Nope, wrong application. The article says:
    "these electronics are not designed for devices that require high density, like memory chips or microprocessors."

    Compared to silicon chips this technology is big and slow.

    The good news is that aside from computers, most uses for circutry don't require ultra-high transistor density or ultra-high processing speed.

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  2. Re:Hold on. You mean. . . by Maddog+Batty · · Score: 3, Informative

    I mean, they have those traces-printed-on-plastic ribbon cables connecting things like keyboards and calculator screens to components. And printer heads in inkjets.

    Flex's are made using a similar process to that used to make printed circuit board. A layer of copper is stuck to a sheet of plastic and then photo etched. This is cheap but not as cheap as a normal printing process.

    Plus, we have alloys which can be deposited on substrates a micron-layer at a time.

    This can be done (crisp packets for example (sorry - chip packets for you yanks)) but most processes require high temperatures which don't do much good to a layer of plastic.

    How tough is it to dope conducting inks with Gallium-Arsenide? (Or whatever).

    Physics Today have an article about the University of Cambridge printing transistors using ink jet printers. Conducting inks are not unusual - indeed most mass produced PCBs are put together with screen printed solder paste. Its a bit of a step to call this an ink but it gives you an idea of what's possible.

    Why the heck hasn't this technology been around for a decade or more? It doesn't seem so much like an advance as it does a, "They finally got off their asses and assembled the stupid thing."

    The devel is in the detail. Sure I can demonstrate printing to you using some chimney soot and half a potato. Its quite a bit harder to produce a 100,000 copies of a newspaper (including those AOL CD's) for just a few pence. Development always takes many times longer than you think and far more money.

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  3. Mass Memory by Megawatt-hour · · Score: 3, Informative

    Perusing Rolltronics' web site I came across this interesting nugget:

    Multilevel Organic Solid State Memory

    It seems you can stack up these sheets and make very dense memory out of it. Here is a quote from the article:

    "They will be available in different form factors, ranging from single sheets where minimum thickness is important to stacks which can easily be put into a product that offers a terabyte of storage in a package no bigger than a pad of paper."

    Appropriately enough, the author's name is Dr. Sheats.