The UV light from an excimer laser is well absorbed by biological matter and organic compounds. Rather than burning or cutting material, the excimer laser adds enough energy to disrupt the molecular bonds of the surface tissue, which effectively disintegrates into the air in a tightly controlled manner through ablation rather than burning. Thus excimer lasers have the useful property that they can remove exceptionally fine layers of surface material with almost no heating or change to the remainder of the material which is left intact. These properties make excimer lasers well suited to precision micromachining organic material (including certain polymers and plastics), or delicate surgeries such as eye surgery (LASIK http://www.excimer.sk/?lang=en&p=lasik).
Laser action in an excimer molecule occurs because it has a bound (associative) excited state, but a repulsive (disassociative) ground state. This is because noble gases such as xenon and krypton are highly inert and do not usually form chemical compounds. However, when in an excited state (induced by an electrical discharge or high-energy electron beams, which produce high energy pulses), they can form temporarily-bound molecules with themselves (dimers) or with halides (complexes) such as fluorine and chlorine. The excited compound can give up its excess energy by undergoing spontaneous or stimulated emission, resulting in a strongly-repulsive ground state molecule which very quickly (on the order of a picosecond) disassociates back into two unbound atoms. This forms a population inversion between the two states.
Most "excimer" lasers are of the noble gas halide type, for which the term excimer is strictly speaking a misnomer (since a dimer refers to a molecule of two identical or similar parts): The correct but less commonly used name for such is exciplex laser http://www.excimer.sk.
The wavelength of an excimer laser depends on the molecules used, and is usually in the ultraviolet:
| Excimer | Wavelength | Relative Power |
|---|---|---|
| Ar2* | 126 nm | |
| Kr2* | 146 nm | |
| F2 | 157 nm | 10 |
| Xe2* | 172 & 175 nm | |
| ArF | 193 nm | 60 |
| KrF | 248 nm | 100 |
| XeBr | 282 nm | |
| XeCl | 308 nm | 50 |
| XeF | 351 nm | 45 |
| CaF2 | 193 nm | |
| KrCl | 222 nm | 25 |
| Cl2 | 259 nm | |
| N2 | 337 nm | 5 |
Excimer lasers are usually operated with a pulse rate of around 100 Hz and a pulse duration of ~10 ns, although some operate as high as 8 kHz and 200 ns.
For electric discharge pump see: Nitrogen laser.
This quote is a bit misleading. The beam output from an excimer is in general multimode and not of good quality when compared to other lasers. In laser drilling systems the excimer is employed similar to a conventional light source. The accuracy comes from the imaging system and the fact that UV light has a short wavelength.
In 1980 - 1983, Dr. Samuel Blum was working with Dr. Rangaswamy Srinivasan and Dr. James Wynne at IBM’s T. J. Watson Research Center when they observed the effect of the ultraviolet excimer laser on biological materials. Intrigued, they investigated further, finding that the laser made clean, precise cuts that would be ideal for delicate surgeries. This resulted in a fundamental patent and Drs. Blum, Srinivasan, and Wynne were elected to the National Inventors Hall of Fame in 2002. Subsequent work introduced the excimer laser for use in angioplasty . Kansas State University pioneered the study of the excimer laser which made LASIK surgery possible 
Excimer lasers are quite large and bulky devices, which is a disadvantage in their medical applications, although their size is rapidly decreasing with ongoing development.