Roger Grace, President of Roger Grace Associates, the world’s leading marketing consultancy specializing in Sensors and MEMS, has announced the call for abstracts for the full-day June 27, 2022 Pre-Conference Symposium during Sensors Converge (formerly Sensors Expo) Conference, to take place at the McEnery Convention Center in San Jose, CA. Interested presenters are requested to submit abstracts of between 150-175 words as attached documents no later than April 13,2022 and sent to Roger Grace, Symposium Chair, at[email protected].
The full-day Pre-Conference Symposium will address Printed/Flexible Stretchable (P/F/S) and Functional Fabric (FF) Sensors and electronics from a commercialization perspective to support Medtech / Wearables applications. The Symposium will be led by over a dozen world recognized leaders in the P/F/S and FF sensors and sensor-based systems area, presenting information on current research and development activities, application opportunities, manufacturing methods and commercialization challenges for P/S/T and FF sensors and P/S/T and FF Sensor-based systems issues.
Abstract topics submissions of interest to be presented at the Pre-Conference Symposium include:
- Product applications and technologies to support MedTech/Wearables addressing sensors, batteries, memory/logic, packaging and interconnects
- Infrastructure of materials, manufacturing and test systems
- Commercialization challenges and recommended approaches to overcome
- And more
Mr. Grace stated, “This all-day symposium is a key and integral part to “evangelize” P/F/S and FF sensors. It was developed to help inform and educate the technical, technical management, and business community of the major significance of P/F /S and FF sensor-based technologies and their enabled far-reaching opportunities in many applications including MedTech and wearables from both a current and future perspective.” He concluded, “This will be the fifth time that I have organized this session topic at this most significant industry event and am looking to have presenters share their most recent and relevant findings and products with the live and in-person audience.
Ms. Charlene Soucy, Senior Director, Sensors and Electronics, said, “We decided early on in the creation of the pre-conference symposium to address MedTech / Wearables because of its current and future importance in the sensors space. We are looking forward to very successful technical sessions, Expo Hall and especially Roger’s star-studded array of speakers in our pre-conference program.”
About Printed/Flexible/Stretchable and Functional Fabric Sensors
The availability of sensors that can take the shape and work reliably in their imposed complex and demanding working environment has existed for quite some time. With the recent popularity of the Internet of Things (IoT), “wearables” (including clothing) and more importantly, disposables, the need for small, lightweight and low-power, low-cost single or multiple sensors per system that also can conform to the shape and environment in which they must operate, is becoming essential.
With the creation of measurement systems and their accompanying microcontroller/embedded sensor fusion algorithms that enable them to address a myriad of IoT and other applications, printed/flexible/stretchable sensors were a clear solution. Recent estimates report the total market for printed/flexible sensors to be $8 billion of the $340 billion flexible electronics market by 2025. With expected unit average sales prices (ASPs) of approximately $0.01 by 2025, this translates into an annual 800-billion-unit volume market, qualifying as a significant constituent of the trillion sensors initiative.