SemiNex Sets New World Record in Laser Diode Power

4.5 WATTS OF POWER ACHIEVED AT 1550 NM FROM A SINGLE SEMICONDUCTOR DIODE LASER


Middleton, MA – SemiNex Corporation today announced the achievement of greater than 4.5 watts of optical power from a single laser diode at 1550 nm wavelength. These results compliment SemiNex’s earlier results of greater than 4 watts of optical power at 1450 nm achieved in 2005.  

“We are very pleased with these latest results”, stated David Bean, President of SemiNex.  “These results exceeded our expectations based on theoretical models and we were surprised that the process yield may also exceed expectations, especially for our first process run at this wavelength.”  

These results validate SemiNex’s theoretical models and design techniques.  SemiNex markets infrared laser diodes with wavelengths between 1300 nm and 1600 nm.  The 4.5 watt results compare favorably to conventional laser results of 0.8 to 1.5 watts.  “This represents a 3 to 5 fold increase in laser performance”, says Bean.   

SemiNex fabricated this product to fulfill an extremely difficult customer specification.  “Our customer is extremely pleased and looks forward to a continued relationship with SemiNex”, said Bean.  

Higher power laser diodes enable laser systems that are smaller, more powerful, and more efficient.  These new SemiNex lasers may open new markets for laser devices and mass-market applications for infrared lasers.  Infrared lasers are used in medical, military, telecommunications, and industrial applications.  Specific applications for these diodes include: medical lasers for aesthetic procedures, free space optical communications, LIDAR military applications, and pumping sources for diode pumped solid-state lasers (DPSSLs).  

SemiNex featured in Mass High Tech

A BOOTSTRAPPED MIDDLETON COMPANY RECENTLY MADE ITS FIRST MAJOR SALE AS IT ATTEMPTS TO PUSH ITS LASER TECHNOLOGY INTO THE GROWING MARKETPLACE KNOWN AS “WRINKLE ERADICATION.”


by Dike Henderson
Mass High Tech Journal

A bootstrapped Middleton company recently made its first major sale as it attempts to push its laser technology into the growing marketplace known as “wrinkle eradication.”

Now SemiNex Corp., which has developed prototypes for a more efficient consumer laser treatment, is focusing its business plan to partner with vendors who would then “sell” the services much the way marketing teams created Tupperware parties and “Botox Happy Hours.”

A motivated individual will invite friends and family to the house and demonstrate the SemiNex technology that removes wrinkles. Those convinced of its effectiveness can get a treatment right in the living room. Later, that consumer can host her own event.

“The work itself is done by a technologist, not a full physician,” said Bean. “This approach has worked with Botox, and we feel that we have a better technology because the tools are more effective.”

Bean declined to name his new customer, but the target that his company is aiming at is one famously served by Botox. Botox injection to eradicate wrinkles is the fastest-growing cosmetic procedure in health care, according to industry statistics. Close to 2 million people received injections each year, according to data by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.

SemiNex technology calls for “laser removal” rather than injections. And company officials say they have a technology to provide “better performance and laser efficiency while drastically reducing the laser size and power consumption.” Company officials say approval from the FDA is not required. SemiNex would be entering a crowded market, as more than a dozen companies are involved in medical laser systems to eradicate wrinkles, tattoos and unwanted hair.

“We’re designed to be the Intel inside the box,” said David Bean, president of the 2-year-old company. “Our technology will be used by vendors, who will deal with consumers. This is a large field that will get larger. It’s where computers were in the late ’70s. The industry is going to explode.”

Locally, several companies are generating significant revenue in laser-treatment technologies.  Candela Corp., based in Wayland, has annual revenue of about $110 million, according to public documents. Cynosure Inc., a private company with headquarters in Chelmsford, has annual sales of between $20 million and $49 million, according to figures in a database developed by Mass High Tech.

Palomar Medical Technologies Inc., in Burlington, also sells medical lasers appropriate to hair and wrinkle removal. It has annual revenue of about $70 million.

Microsulis Ltd. is a tissue ablation (removal) company from the United Kingdom that has opened U.S. operations in Waltham. Chief Operating Officer Nicholas Johnston said the company might look at wrinkle removal, but right now the company is focusing on women’s reproductive health issues. National players include Lumenis, Laserscope and Iridex.

The fact that so many companies are making money in the field suggests a growing opportunity. “With the aging of the U.S. society, there certainly will be a growing older population with discretionary funds to spend on wrinkle removal treatments,” said Dr. Michael Miller, a physician who runs a consulting firm in Cambridge. “A marketplace will be more competitive as more treatments are developed.”

SemiNex officials say the technology component that will distinguish them is that they will provide “high-power semiconductor lasers with six times the power and half the cost of conventional semiconductor lasers.”

Investors in addition to Bean include Donald Freeman, a former chief executive at Davol Inc. and HydroCision; and Dan Pulver, the company’s principal scientist.

Mass High Tech – Direct Link

SemiNex Secures Financing for Growth

For more information, contact:
Neal Stoker
VP Sales and Marketing
SemiNex Corporation
978-326-7703

Middleton, MA (April 4, 2007) – SemiNex Corporation, a provider of state-of-the-art laser diodes for the medical, military and communications markets, announced today that it has completed funding for its first round of expansion financing, led by the eCoast Angels group.

This new funding will allow SemiNex to rapidly advance its business. “We are pleased to have the funding to deploy our technology into these broader markets”, stated David Bean, President of SemiNex. “We look forward to filling previously unmet needs for high-power lasers at long wavelengths”.

SemiNex was founded in 2003, and has achieved impressive technical results for laser power and efficiency at long wavelengths between 1300 nm and 1600 nm. SemiNex will use the funding to optimize its laser attributes and packaging to suit the needs of its customers in the medical, military and communications applications, as well as broadening its customer base. “We are actively working with customers to design SemiNex technology into next-generation systems”, noted Bean. SemiNex laser diodes are smaller and more powerful than traditional lasers, and allow system vendors to design smaller, more efficient systems at a lower cost. “We also see a huge opportunity for SemiNex to enable new applications that were previously not possible with currently available components.”

“We are excited to play a role in the company’s growth as it exploits its technology in the broader marketplace”, stated Michael Marsh of eCoast Angels. eCoast angels was joined by other individual investors and CIV Ventures of New York to complete the funding round. “We are proud to be involved with Seminex as they have focused on a very promising new market for lasers and optics and their team’s experience put them in a real leadership position within that market” noted Greg Smith of CIV Ventures.

About SemiNex
SemiNex aims to fundamentally transform key industries by displacing conventional laser technology with super-high-power semiconductor diode lasers. SemiNex enables cost-effective laser applications by providing better semiconductor laser performance and efficiency while drastically reducing the laser size and power consumption. This enables lasers to be used more broadly in high-volume applications for medical, military and free space optical communications systems. For more information, see /.

 About eCoast Angels
eCoast Angels focus on early-stage companies involved with advanced technology, e-commerce, healthcare, and industrial products and services. Members have invested in several companies since the network’s inception in 2000, organizing syndicated angel investment of over $22 Million, driving nearly $50 Million in Venture Capital investment to companies.  For more information, see www.ecoastangels.com.

MassMEDIC’s annual MedTech Investors Conference

MassMedic

SemiNex Corporation was invited to present at annual Mass MEDIC investors conference held on November 19, 2005.  MassMEDIC’s annual MedTech Investors Conference is a showcase for the region’s emerging medical device companies.  This year’s program was be held at the Park Plaza Hotel in Boston.

David Bean, SemiNex President, presented the company’s business plans and technical results.  Mr. Bean’s presentation highlighted SemiNex’s initial sales to a leading medical system provider and the company’s world record laser performance.

For more information see http://www.massmedic.com/.

Quick Thinking: SemiNex wins the North Shore Business Plan Competition

By Christine Gillette
Staff writer – Eagle Tribune
SALEM, Mass. — When it all came down to it, it was how well David Bean thinks on his feet that captured his company first place in the first North Shore Business Plan Competition.
Bean’s company, SemiNex Corp. of Middleton, was the winner of the $5,000 first prize Wednesday night. Taking second place and a $3,000 prize was BioPoint Solutions of Danvers, which has developed software to automate pre-clinical research in the drug discovery process. In third place, Custom Medicine of Beverly, which makes and sells compounded and other customized pharmaceuticals, won $2,000.


They were the top winners of the 24 businesses that participated in the first-ever competition, which kicked off in February. While the panel of a dozen judges reviewed the plans in writing, the head-to-head contest Wednesday night — presented before about 80 onlookers at Salem State College — was the deciding factor.
“It was very close,” said David Ives, chief executive officer of North Shore International Group/APEX Group Holdings, and one of the judges of the competition.
Each finalist was given 30 minutes to make their case, with the first 15 minutes going to the prepared presentation and the second to questions and answers from a three-judge panel.
 
Ives said the decision as to who won came down to how well the presenters addressed the panel’s impromptu questioning.
“I think they did the best job of answering questions put to them,” Ives said of SemiNex.
SemiNex is in the development phase on a high-power semiconductor laser that will be used in cosmetic procedures including reducing acne, wrinkles and scars. The technology uses a laser diode smaller than a grain of rice.
Although the company has two employees and a director now, SemiNex projects it will have 31 workers in two years and 100 in five, and Bean said he expects the company will stay in Middleton. As the winner of the competition, the company must have at least 10 employees in Essex County within two years.
“I think they could have the biggest potential economic impact,” judge Lars Swanson of BancBoston Ventures said.
Bean said the $5,000 first prize will go to help fund the production of a sample run of SemiNex’s product.
Contest runner-up Best Friends Bakery of Gloucester, which makes all-natural dog biscuits, did not present its business plan live Wednesday night, but still received a $1,000 prize. Based on the strength of its written business plan, organizers and judges decided to present a surprise honorable mention at the event.
Prior to the finals of the business plan competition Wednesday, an “elevator pitch” contest was held. The winner of the contest — in which an entrepreneur must offer a “compelling description” of their business in 90 seconds — was Powerhouse Enterprises.
In addition to the cash prizes awarded this week, organizers hope to find other ways to support all of the companies that competed going forward.
“I think we found a lot of wonderful companies,” said Christine Sullivan, executive director of the Enterprise Center at Salem State College, which organized the event with the North Shore Technology Council, Small Business Development Center, Cape Ann Business Incubator and the North Shore, Cape Ann, Beverly, Lynn Area, Marblehead, Peabody and Salem chambers of commerce.
Business sponsors were Eastern Bank and Banknorth.  North Shore Business Plan judges
Henry Bertolon Jr., founder, NECX.com
David Baer, partner, Ruberto, Israel & Weiner, P.C.
C.W. Dick, managing director, Ascent Venture Partners
Tom Dusenberry, founder/chief executive officer, Call-It
David Ives, CEO, North Shore International
Group/APEX Group Holdings
John Shane, founder/president, Palmer Service Corp.
Joe Riley, senior vice president, Eastern Bank
Tom Riley, chairman/CEO, ConnectEdu
Leah Ritchie, associate professor, Salem State College
Lars Swanson, director, BancBoston Ventures
Cynthia Williams, partner, Dechert LLP
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