# High-Performance Solid State Dye Lasers For Wound Care and Cosmetic Treatments

> **NIH NIH R43** · STAR VOLTAIC LLC · 2020 · $206,351

## Abstract

Abstract
Solid state pulsed dye lasers (ssPDLs) are a potentially revolutionary class of therapeutic lasers that could be
used to address a broad array of health issues, from mundane conditions like acne to serious interventions like
skin cancer treatment, wound sterilization, and scar remodeling. In addition, these lasers would also be
compact, inexpensive, and easily switch between emission wavelengths. These improved performance metrics
could have a number of significant impacts: First, it could reduce the number of devices needed in a practice,
as most medical lasers are not capable of generating more than one wavelength of light, requiring multiple
lasers. In addition, the lower cost and portability would improve patient access to the treatment, as it would
increase the number of physicians who could afford to purchase and maintain a laser, and increase its mobility.
Unfortunately, the critical component of these lasers suffer from a fundamental materials science problem: The
poor solubility of laser dyes. For a laser to work, you must have a “gain medium” that allows the device to
generate light. In ssPDLs, this gain medium is composed of fluorescent dyes dissolved in a solid polymer
matrix. When dispersed at low concentrations, laser dyes are highly efficient emitters of light, but the small
number of dye molecules in the gain medium means the laser power will be low. Unfortunately, when the
concentration is increased the dye molecules are no longer efficient emitters. This is a result of “quenching”, a
phenomenon in which over-concentrated dyes aggregate and lose their ability to generate light. In practice, this
means laser dye gain media are confined to low power operation, because there’s no way to get both highly
efficient emission and a large number of molecules in the gain medium. If it were possible to overcome the
concentration limits of fluorescent dyes in polymer media an opportunity would exist to create an ssPDL that
lives up to its full potential. Star Voltaic, LLC, doing business as Halophore, has developed a solution to this
decades-old problem: Novel fluorescent materials that can be utilized at concentrations much higher than the
current dye materials. These materials are immune to the “quenching” phenomenon that hinders other ssPDL
media, and can achieve brightnesses 100x greater than any current technology. Our proposal’s central
hypothesis is that the superior brightness of our concentrated fluorescent materials will allow us to make a
laser with improved performance, capable of making a high-power beam that can easily switch between
wavelengths. To test this hypothesis, we will pursue three Specific Aims: (1) Develop processing conditions for
making dye-doped gain media; (2) construct a prototype laser system for the ssPDL media; (3) test the
functionality of the gain medium in the prototype laser system, confirming characteristics of high performance,
like high lasing efficiency and high signal gain. If successful, w...

## Key facts

- **NIH application ID:** 10010009
- **Project number:** 1R43EB029890-01
- **Recipient organization:** STAR VOLTAIC LLC
- **Principal Investigator:** Christopher R Benson
- **Activity code:** R43 (R01, R21, SBIR, etc.)
- **Funding institute:** NIH
- **Fiscal year:** 2020
- **Award amount:** $206,351
- **Award type:** 1
- **Project period:** 2020-09-10 → 2022-04-09

## Primary source

NIH RePORTER: https://reporter.nih.gov/project-details/10010009

## Citation

> US National Institutes of Health, RePORTER application 10010009, High-Performance Solid State Dye Lasers For Wound Care and Cosmetic Treatments (1R43EB029890-01). Retrieved via AI Analytics 2026-05-24 from https://api.ai-analytics.org/grant/nih/10010009. Licensed CC0.

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