Pentagon Seeks Photonic Sensors to Advance Regenerative Medicine

“Beyond the science of it all, a primary goal behind the effort is to stimulate domestic expertise and production of biotechnologies.”

The U.S. Department of Defense is pursuing new sensor technologies that can monitor biological tissue health in real time to support regenerative medicine and domestic biomanufacturing.

This article discusses the BIO INSPECT (Biological, Integrated, Novel, Silicon Photonics for Efficient Characterization and Testing) project led by AIM Photonics in collaboration with the Air Force Research Laboratory.

The project aims to develop integrated photonic sensors capable of measuring key tissue metrics such as pressure and temperature to improve wound recovery and strengthen U.S. leadership in biotechnology manufacturing.

Read the full article on Defense One:
Pentagon Seeks Sensors to Aid Regenerative Medicine

Previous
Previous

AIM Photonics Summer Academy at MIT Strengthens U.S. Talent Pipeline in Integrated Photonics

Next
Next

Researchers Demonstrate Efficient Integration of Quantum Dot Lasers on Silicon Chiplets