A team led by Keon Jae Lee, scientists from the Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST), fabricated an ultra-thin array of flexible vertical micro-light-emitting diodes (uLEDs).
The array consisted of 900 red uLEDs on a chip slightly smaller than a postage stamp and only 20 um thick.
Alopecia is considered an aesthetic, psychological, and social issue among modern people. Although laser-induced skin stimulation is utilized for depilation treatment, such treatment has significant drawbacks of high energy consumption, huge equipment size, and limited usage in daily life.
However, the new device, reported in the journal ACS Nano, uses almost 1,000 times less power per unit area than a conventional phototherapeutic laser, and it also does not heat up enough to cause thermal damage to human skin.
The array was sturdy and flexible, enduring up to 10,000 cycles of bending and unbending.
The researchers tested the device's ability to regrow hair on mice with shaved backs.
Compared with untreated mice or those receiving minoxidil injections, the mice treated with the uLED patch for 15 minutes a day for 20 days showed significantly faster hair growth, a wider regrowth area and longer hairs, the findings showed.
(This story has not been edited by Social News XYZ staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
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