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New Report on the Chemistry of Electronics and Electrics

Reportlinker.com has released a new report on the chemistry of electronics and electrical industry titled, ‘Most-Needed Chemicals for New Disruptive Electronics and Electrics’.

The report offers previously unavailable consolidated information on the chemicals that play a significant role in the advancement of the electronics and electrical industry. Every possible capability comprising biodegradability, invisibility, ductility, edibility and other such unique properties can be incorporated in manufactured devices in the electronics and electrical industry by controlling the chemistry.

The report details the applications of metals like copper, aluminum and silver in the industry and the various forms in which they are deployed such as nano, ink, mildly alloyed and precursor forms. The report presents the most commonly used 12 chemical compounds in the electronics and electrical industry and draws comparisons with other compounds exhibiting potentially desirable electrical and optical properties. A detailed description of various important carbon isomers, organic and inorganic chemical compounds is included in the report. The report also presents silicon in a perspective different from the conventional application of the material in chips. The report illustrates 15 basic formulations employed for cathode and anode formations in lithium-ion batteries manufactured by 131 companies.

The report lists out 37 categories of new, emerging electrical and electronic devices from nanoscale to large devices. The business from these emerging technologies is valued to be greater than US $50 billion. The report enables materials and chemicals manufacturers to identify new technologies employing common chemical formulations that will help the manufacturers to mitigate their investment risk.

Source: http://www.reportlinker.com

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G.P. Thomas

Written by

G.P. Thomas

Gary graduated from the University of Manchester with a first-class honours degree in Geochemistry and a Masters in Earth Sciences. After working in the Australian mining industry, Gary decided to hang up his geology boots and turn his hand to writing. When he isn't developing topical and informative content, Gary can usually be found playing his beloved guitar, or watching Aston Villa FC snatch defeat from the jaws of victory.

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