Electronics Era

  • About Us
  • Advertise with Us
  • Contact Us
  • e-Mag
  • Webinars
Header logo on website
Advertisement
Advertisement
Menu
  • Home
  • News
    • Industry News
    • Product News
  • TECH ROOM
    • Sensor
    • VR / AR
    • Embedded
    • Medical Electronics
    • Industry 4.0
    • Robotic
    • Automation
    • Smart Machine
    • Component
    • MCU
    • Manufacturing
    • Aerospace & Defence
    • Security
    • Policy
    • RENEWABLES
      • Sustainability
  • Semiconductor
    • AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRONICS
      • EVs
      • HEVs
      • ADAS
      • Connected Cars
    • IoT-Internet of Things
      • Development Kit
      • IoT Design
    • Power Electronics
      • AC-DC/DC-DC Converters
      • Mosfets
      • IGBTs
      • LEDs
  • T & M
    • 5G testing
    • Oscilloscopes
    • SDN & NFV
    • RF & Wireless
  • AI/ML
  • Telecom
    • 5G/6G
  • Future Tech
    • Data Center
    • Cloud Computing
    • Big Data Analytics
  • Webinars
  • Editor’s Pick
    • Tech Article
    • Tech Blog
    • White Papers
    • EE-Tech Talk
    • Market Research
    • Videos
  • EE Awards
    • EE Awards 2025
    • EE Awards 2024
  • MORE
    • E-Mag
    • Events
    • MAGAZINE Subscription
    • Contact Us
Home Editor's Desk Tech Article

Will IME Be the Path for Printed Electronics to Break into Automotives

Nimish by Nimish
May 18, 2026
in Tech Article
Reading Time: 5 mins read
IDTechEx

Kronos Mechatronics at LOPEC 2026. Source: IDTechEx.

Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on LinkedIn

With in-mold electronics (IME) company, Kronos Mechatronics, having won the LOPEC 2026 Startup Award for Best Business Potential, the hype for printed electronic technologies can continue to flourish. In automotive applications, IME can combine smart aesthetics with functionality, while reducing the cost and weight associated with traditional wiring.
 

IDTechEx recently attended LOPEC 2026 in Munich and spoke with multiple printed electronics and IME companies operating within different sectors, including automotives. Their report, “In-Mold Electronics 2025-2035: Forecasts, Technologies, Markets“, also covers some of the latest developments happening within the industry.
 

Advantages of IME within the automotive space
 

Increased demand for sensing, lighting, and heating systems within vehicles is creating a space within the market for IME to enter, with low profile options becoming necessary to reduce weight by eradicating the need for housing whole wiring networks behind the dashboard.
 

IME can allow for conductive traces (replacing wires) to be run within surfaces, rather than taking up space behind them, to make components lighter and vehicles more comfortable. The capacity for IME to create a variety of 3D structures is what sets the technology apart from regular 2D-surface printed circuit boards.
 

Exhibiting companies at LOPEC 2026
 

Numerous IME companies are starting to enter the automotive space, with many showcasing their technologies at LOPEC 2026 in Munich. Kronos Mechatronics, MackSmaTec, Tactotek and KAIXIN AC are a few of the companies offering IME solutions for automotive applications, such as enhancing interiors and upgrading aesthetics with the integration of heating elements or colored lighting. The use of IME rather than 2D electronics allows for more complex structures and curved surfaces to be fitted with electronics, so their presence can be more versatile and met with a wider scope of design choice not restricted by practicality.

Heating and lighting with IME
 

Heat technologies in particular are necessary for electric vehicles, as they lack the heat otherwise produced by internal combustion engines. MackSmaTec demonstrated the integration of wiring around radars within cars to keep them working at an optimal temperature and to allow for defrosting. Conductive inks company, Henkel, showcased heat mat technology to keep EV batteries warm, made with 2D printed electronics.

MackSmaTec at LOPEC 2026. Source: IDTechEx.
 

Tactotek at LOPEC 2026. Source: IDTechEx.
 

Colored lighting is increasingly desired within newer vehicle models to enhance design features and create a more modern look and feel. This is shown to be particularly common in the form of strip lighting in doors, multicolored dashboard lights, and lights underneath vehicle badges. Tactotek exhibited their adoption of IME technologies to integrate lighting features for these applications, presenting a variety of models at the exhibit to showcase versatility.
 

IME is currently being assessed for a number of automotive applications, and if successful, these may see adoption from around 2027 to 2028.
 

For more information, visit IDTechEx’s portfolio of Printed & Flexible Electronics Research Reports and Subscriptions for research into 2D and 3D electronics, and the “In-Mold Electronics 2025-2035: Forecasts, Technologies, Markets” for the latest IME developments.

Tags: IDTechExPrinted Electronics
Nimish

Nimish

Join Our Newsletter

* indicates required
Electronics Era

Electronics Era, India's no.1 growing B2B news forum on Electronics and Cutting Edge Technology is exploring the editorial opportunity for organizations working in the Electronics Manufacturing Services(EMS) Industry.

Follow Us

Browse by Category

  • 5G testing
  • 5G/6G
  • AC-DC/DC-DC Converters
  • ADAS
  • Aerospace & Defence
  • AI/ML
  • Automation
  • AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRONICS
  • Big Data Analytics
  • Blockchain
  • Cloud Computing
  • Component
  • Connected Cars
  • Data Center
  • Editor's Desk
  • EE-Tech Talk
  • Electronics Components
  • Embedded
  • EVs
  • Future Tech
  • HEVs
  • Industry 4.0
  • Industry News
  • IoT Design
  • IoT-Internet of Things
  • LED & Lighting
  • LEDs
  • Manufacturing
  • Market Research
  • MCU
  • Medical Electronics
  • Mosfets
  • News
  • Oscilloscopes
  • Policy
  • Power Electronics
  • Product News
  • RENEWABLES
  • RF & Wireless
  • Robotic
  • SDN & NFV
  • Security
  • Semiconductor
  • Sensor
  • Smart Machine
  • SMT/PCB/EMS
  • Sustainability
  • T & M
  • Tech Article
  • Tech Blog
  • TECH ROOM
  • Telecom
  • Uncategorized
  • VR / AR
  • White Papers

Recent News

STMicroelectronics

ST Introduces an Intelligent Vibration Sensor Designed for Industrial Condition Monitoring Applications

June 15, 2026
5g

5G/Private 5G + IIoT + Machine Learning: Enabling Ultra-Low Latency Industrial Use Cases

June 13, 2026
  • About Us
  • Advertise with Us
  • Contact Us

© 2022-23 TechZone Print Media | All Rights Reserved

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    • Industry News
    • Product News
  • TECH ROOM
    • Sensor
    • VR / AR
    • Embedded
    • Medical Electronics
    • Industry 4.0
    • Robotic
    • Automation
    • Smart Machine
    • Component
    • MCU
    • Manufacturing
    • Aerospace & Defence
    • Security
    • Policy
    • RENEWABLES
      • Sustainability
  • Semiconductor
    • AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRONICS
      • EVs
      • HEVs
      • ADAS
      • Connected Cars
    • IoT-Internet of Things
      • Development Kit
      • IoT Design
    • Power Electronics
      • AC-DC/DC-DC Converters
      • Mosfets
      • IGBTs
      • LEDs
  • T & M
    • 5G testing
    • Oscilloscopes
    • SDN & NFV
    • RF & Wireless
  • AI/ML
  • Telecom
    • 5G/6G
  • Future Tech
    • Data Center
    • Cloud Computing
    • Big Data Analytics
  • Webinars
  • Editor’s Pick
    • Tech Article
    • Tech Blog
    • White Papers
    • EE-Tech Talk
    • Market Research
    • Videos
  • EE Awards
    • EE Awards 2025
    • EE Awards 2024
  • MORE
    • E-Mag
    • Events
    • MAGAZINE Subscription
    • Contact Us

© 2022-23 TechZone Print Media | All Rights Reserved

Advertisement
Advertisement