Skip to main content

MGI Acquires high-tech component printer Ceradrop

Plastic card printer MGI Digital Graphic Technology has acquired Ceradrop, a high-tech inkjet printing component designer and manufacturer serving the printed electronics industry, in a move that positions MGI to enter emerging, high-growth markets for printed electronics. Limoges-based Ceradrop, founded in 2006, was originally a spin-off from the world-renowned CNRS (Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique) laboratory, a leader in the French market for inkjet equipment for printed electronics as wel
October 29, 2013 Read time: 2 mins
Edmond Abergel, MGI: ‘Promising area’
Plastic card printer MGI Digital Graphic Technology has acquired Ceradrop, a high-tech inkjet printing component designer and manufacturer serving the printed electronics industry, in a move that positions MGI to enter emerging, high-growth markets for printed electronics.

Limoges-based Ceradrop, founded in 2006, was originally a spin-off from the world-renowned CNRS (Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique) laboratory, a leader in the French market for inkjet equipment for printed electronics as well as for 3D-printed components.

Ceradrop develops advanced equipment for printing high-value 2D and 3D-ceramic and organic electronic components thanks to its unique technology. Using specialist inks Ceradrop's products print highly complex components, which are used in antennas, Organic Light Emitting Diode (OLED) display screens, electronic chip cards, solar cells, RFID tags, printed batteries, and biomedical sensors.
They can be printed onto a wide variety of materials such as glass, metals, polymers, plastics, paper and others, presenting a wealth of applications that outperform many conventional manufacturing processes. Ceradrop currently has customers in advanced scientific laboratories such as the CEA and Centre National d' Etudes Spatiales, industrial groups including Gemalto, DisaSolar and Thales as well as American universities such as Northwestern. The genesis of the equipment Ceradrop makes stems from applied nanotechnology research, enabling it to print widths of conductive track as narrow as 50 micrometres (μ) as well as multilayer (3D) ceramic components.

Commenting on the move Edmond Abergel, president of MGI, said: "With the acquisition of Ceradrop, a new promising area of growth emerges for the MGI Group. Today, with the explosion of printed electronics and 3D-printing, new opportunities are available to us. Our technological advantages allow us to be a leader in this new business segment. With the team from Ceradrop at our side, we can establish a centre of excellence with exceptional and global expertise the field of inkjet. Integrating Ceradrop will thus enable us not only to accelerate innovation in our current markets but also to position ourselves in these new markets for printed electronics and 3D-printing, which has been widely forecast to become mass market in the next five years." %$Linker: 2 External <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 0 0 0 oLinkExternal www.MGI-fr.com www.mgi-fr.com/ false http://www.mgi-fr.com/ false false%>

Related Content

  • Web head: Kamber highlights new glass bead gun
    March 20, 2018
    Kamber, an internationally recognised company in the field of road marking, is here at Intertraffic to highlight a new glass bead gun, born out of requirements, feedback, and the expectations of existing customers. The P86 glass bead gun is very easy to use and maintain. It is equipped with a hardened steel closing piston which is adjustable with a screw to finely and precisely increase or decrease the flow of glass beads, without changing the nozzle diameter. It is also fed easily with glass beads from a
  • Borum line marking at Intertraffic
    February 6, 2014
    The Borum stand at Intertraffic Amsterdam 2014 promises to be a busy place. The company says Borum partners from all over the world will be there to provide professional advice on line marking equipment. And the company will be unveiling some innovations for mounting on all of its machines, including a bead alarm (a sensor mounted on the bead gun to detect a stop of bead flow and provide an alarm) and an air dryer for a bead tank which Borum says is especially useful in areas with a high level of humidity.
  • Used EV batteries to transform stationary storage
    August 26, 2016
    According to a report (link http://about.bnef.com/landing-pages/new-life-used-ev-batteries-stationary-storage/.) by Bloomberg New Energy Finance (BNEF), the electric vehicle market is set to grow quickly, but so far there has been no consensus on a ‘second-life’ for the many used EV batteries. In this report, senior analyst Claire Curry has compiled the first data and shows that low-cost energy storage could be here sooner than previously thought. She projects that there will be 29 GWh of used EV batter
  • Electronic horizons for Continental Automotive
    September 7, 2014
    Continental Automotive is highlighting its participation in the ITS sector at World Congress with demonstrations of its eHorizon and M2X (motion information to X provider) communication systems.