Electronics Articles

Electropages Insights Blog covers the latest in electronic design through webinars and articles. Delve into topics from sensors to AI implications. Stay ahead with Electropages.


Laser printing a bonding layer onto microchips is expected to keep them cooler

A printed bonding layer up to 120 microns thick on the back of microchips could enable a heat sink that keeps processors 10 degrees Celsius cooler than comparable systems today. Heat is believed to be behind most of the failures of electronics that lead to the...

By Rob Coppinger | 03-12-2018

Entering the World of the Mini Makers

In a time where there are increasing concerns all across Europe about filling the growing number of STEM-related jobs and how to go about addressing the widening skills gap, there is more impetus than ever to encourage both young children and teenagers to beco...

By Mark Patrick | 29-11-2018

Exploration & production industry turns to digital technology

Part Two of this oil and gas technology industry overview focuses on digital technology and data management in E&P (exploration & production). There are at least 10 ‘disruptive’ digital technology areas with the potential to transform this important upstream s...

By Nnamdi Anyadike | 27-11-2018

Software developed to crowdsource electronics design to improve machine learning

In a year’s time electronic integrated circuit designers will be able to download a programme to help them design and which will send back data to its developers to improve machine learning for microchip layouts. The crowdsourcing of designers and designs for...

By Rob Coppinger | 23-11-2018

Oil & Gas Industry Focus (Part One) - sophisticated electronics monitoring

This in depth two part overview sets out to examine the use of increasingly sophisticated electronic technologies in the global oil and gas industry. Part One here, focuses on the use of drones and other devices for the laser scanning of oil and gas facilities...

By Nnamdi Anyadike | 20-11-2018

Researchers cheaply produce thin films of the semiconductor gallium arsenide

Faster flexible electronics and more efficient solar cells are the promise of gallium arsenide as researchers at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) begin to work on photovoltaic devices using their cheaper graphene production process. Gallium arsenide...

Semiconductors | By Rob Coppinger | 16-11-2018

LED lighting market growth surging ahead

Developments in light emitting diode (LED) lighting, buoyed by the phase out of halogen lamp products in the EU from September 1, are continuing apace. Although replacing halogen with energy saving light emitting diodes (LED) is not a new development, figures...

By Nnamdi Anyadike | 13-11-2018

Insulating antiferromagnetic spintronics materials could bring cooler computing

Computers that produce far less heat yet compute at higher frequencies than today’s machines are possible with spin waves, signals that propagate due to magnetic fields, not current, and one research team has sent spin waves far enough to make a circuit viable...

By Rob Coppinger | 09-11-2018

Circuit protection market rising on power surge concerns

The market for advanced surge protection devices (SPDs) is growing rapidly as vendors look to increase the safety of electrical systems. A report from Global Market Insights, Inc. released in October expects the global circuit breakers market to exceed $21bill...

By Nnamdi Anyadike | 07-11-2018

Implanted biomedical sensors could be powered by body glucose

Electronics that can monitor a person’s physiological and biochemical signals for disease but have no battery because they are powered by the patient’s own glucose have been developed by Washington State University. Existing sensors for disease detection can b...

By Rob Coppinger | 02-11-2018

What's all this DNA sequencing software stuff about – anyhow?

The DNA genome that makes us humans tick is vastly complicated and just writing down the entire genetic code would fill around one million pages of very small type. Analysing all that is no small task. Fundamentally deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) is the way i...

By Paul Whytock | 02-11-2018

New generation testers cater for surging MSC demand

A new generation of memory burn-in-testers that are intended to meet the increase in global customer demand for server and mobile storage solutions, is coming on to the market. In October, Advantest Corp. announced the launch of its high throughput, low cost...

By Nnamdi Anyadike | 31-10-2018