UV curable
coatings are used for a variety of purposes in the electronics
and telecommunications industries including PCB and PWB manufacture and
optical fibre coating. In 2000 the total European market for UV curable
coatings in these industries was valued at $115million with an annual
growth rate of 10.8%. The new report from international market analysts
Frost & Sullivan forecasts that this growth will slow to around 7% by 2007.
One of the main areas of challenge to UV supremacy is a requirement for
finer detail from solder masks and resist materials used on circuit boards.
As electronic devices get smaller and smaller and output legs get closer
together there is a need for better definition from the patterning
materials. And that is where photoimaging comes in.
It is not that photoimaging is a new technique. More that it is becoming a
serious competitor thanks to sharply declining prices. When photoimageable
products first hit the market over 10 years ago they were up to three times
the price per kg of UV Curable coatings and the relative cost per printed
area was even higher. But, as the market becomes more competitive and
larger in volume, their prices have fallen to such an extent that they can
no longer be seen as cost-prohibitive in the markets previously dominated
by screen printing.
On the up-side for UV curable coatings, there will be a strong growth in
the demand for optical fibres, where UV curable coatings hold almost 100%
market share. The coating is central in determining the material
properties of the fibre and in some cases 75% by volume of an optical fibre
is made up of the UV curable coating. It is expected that strong
partnerships will develop between coatings suppliers and fibre
manufacturers. But the suppliers will still have to watch the horizon for
alternative technology even in this apparently safe market.
The report is a comprehensive study of the market for UV curable coatings
in Europe and includes data on the printing and packaging, automotive,
furniture & construction, electronics & telecom and consumer goods
industries.