Power Electronics



New NanoMarkets report, Electromagnetic Compatibility (EMC) Materials and Components

Jul 1, 2010 12:00 PM


MARKETS AND OPPORTUNITIES Item Number: Nano-181 analyzes and quantifies the markets for EMC materials including coatings and paints, bulk materials including metals, filled plastics, and conductive polymers and ferrites (and products) component shields, cable shielding, gaskets, filters, device and equipment enclosures, and room enclosure materials. The report provides thorough examination of the opportunities for these materials and products and the firms that produce them. Our analysis also includes technical issues such as relative performance and features of different solutions and a determination of how these characteristics relate to applications, as well as business ones such as how growth in the applications for these products and materials will affect volumes and costs. The uncertainties of newer EMC materials such as nano-materials and some conductive polymers are addressed.

A separate but related goal of this report is to provide detailed forecasts of the markets analyzed, both in volume terms and in monetary terms, from the views of the different material types and the different product types, within the framework of the applications for which they are used and the types of end users.

As higher bandwidth data networking expands into typical workplaces and homes, shielded network cables will displace the less robust unshielded ones. And this is in addition to the ongoing growth in the use of HDMI cables for high-definition audio/video signals; cables that require EMI/RFI shielding where previous generations did not. Revenues from total EMI shielded cables will reach $3.8 billion by 2015.

The automotive sector is also going to be a significant driver for EMC materials and components going forward. While the industry faces increased scrutiny for the risk of EMI given all of the bad publicity surrounding Toyota, the movement towards hybrids and electric cars in addition to the ever increasing amount of on board computing and electronics devices will also drive an increased use of shielding. EMC revenues from the automotive sector will reach $1 billion by 2015.

Conductive polymers are an open opportunity for companies since H.C. Starck and Agfa are not pursuing the EMC space aggressively. By 2015, NanoMarkets expects that the use of conductive polymers for EMC will reach $200 million.


Acceptable Use Policy blog comments powered by Disqus




April 1, 2012
power electronics technology magazine current issue cover




 
Back to Top

Topic Index

Discrete Semis
Bipolar Transistors
IGBTs
Power Modules
Power MOSFETs
Rectifiers/Diodes
Thyristors

Power Management
Digital Power Control
High-Voltage Devices
LED Drivers
Lighting Power Management
Motor Power Management
Power ICs
PWM Controllers
Regulator ICs

Portable Power Management
Batteries
Battery Charger ICs
Fuel Gauges Controllers and Regulators
Micro Fuel Cells

Passives/Packaging
Capacitors
Circuit Protection Devices
Connectors
Magnetics
Packaging
Printed Circuit Boards
Resistors
Sensors & Transducers
Switches & Electromagnetic Relays

Topic Pages
Wind Power
Flyback Transformers

Thermal Management
Fans
Heatpipes & Spreaders
Heatsinks
Liquid Cooling
Thermal Interface Materials
Thermal Management Simulation

Power Systems
DC-DC Converters
Distributed Power Architectures
EMI & EMC
Linear Power Supplies
Safety/Environmental Approvals
Simulation/Modeling
Switch-Mode Power Supplies
Test & Measurement Uninterruptible Power Supplies

Digital Power
Commentaries
Digital Power News
Digital Power Products
Design Features


Contact Us  E-mail Webmaster  For Advertisers  For Search Partners  Privacy Statement  Subscribe  Terms of Use
© 2011 Penton Media, Inc. All rights reserved.