IDTechEx Research Subscribers
A report from the Global Microgrid Innovation Forum Part 2
IDTechEx attended the Global Microgrid Innovation Forum in London September 12th- 14th. The event was attended by a broad mix of academic and commercial stakeholders as well as project developers and financers.
IDTechEx Research Subscribers
PVDF: gymnast of electrically useful fluoropolymers
As explained in our new fluoropolymer report, the market for these formulations will at least double in the next 20 years largely powered by new electrical and electronic applications exploiting properties many of which are not even measured let alone made consistent in today's production lines.
IDTechEx Research Subscribers
A report from the Global Microgrid Innovation Forum Part 1
IDTechEx attended the Global Microgrid Innovation Forum in London September 12th- 14th. The event was attended by a broad mix of academic and commercial stakeholders as well as project developers and financers.
IDTechEx Research Subscribers
A report from GPEX 2018
IDTechEx attended the Global Power and Energy Exhibition in Barcelona from 17 - 20th September 2018
IDTechEx Research Subscribers
TactoTek and Structural Electronics
This article concerns TactoTek in Oulu Finland and how its technologies can scale up and create billion dollar businesses.
IDTechEx Research Subscribers
Massless Energy: Structure Becomes Lighter
This is a technological megatrend. Dumb load-bearing metal structures move to plastic and composite and incorporate energy harvesting and storage material - massless energy. Indeed you could call some of it negative mass energy. Goodbye components-in-a-box.
IDTechEx Research Subscribers
Storm survival of wave energy systems
There are two opposing views on storm survival by the new forms of sea power that are mobile and need no massive concrete and steel infrastructure unlike massive river dams, tidal barrages a offshore conventional wind towers.
IDTechEx Research Subscribers
Airborne Wind Energy 2018 Survey Results and Forecast
AWE should be seen as part of a bigger picture. The next generation of zero emission electricity producing technologies has no huge steel and concrete infrastructure, so it can have much less cost and installation time and making it redeployable.