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The Award database is continually updated throughout the year. As a result, data for FY24 is not expected to be complete until March, 2025.

Download all SBIR.gov award data either with award abstracts (290MB) or without award abstracts (65MB). A data dictionary and additional information is located on the Data Resource Page. Files are refreshed monthly.

The SBIR.gov award data files now contain the required fields to calculate award timeliness for individual awards or for an agency or branch. Additional information on calculating award timeliness is available on the Data Resource Page.

  1. Honey Bee Fast Response System for Broad Band Detection of Airborne Toxicants.

    SBC: BEE ALERT TECHNOLOGY, INC.            Topic: A03160

    This Small Business Innovative Research Phase I project is to develop a broad band detection system for air toxicity. Our overall objective is to show that honey bee orientation and locomotor behaviors can be used as reliable and measurable indicators of certain airborne toxicants. Locomotor sufficiency and directional orientation are behaviors that should unambiguously indicate toxicant exposu ...

    SBIR Phase I 2004 Department of DefenseArmy
  2. Honey Bee Fast Response System for Broad Band Detection of Airborne Toxicants.

    SBC: BEE ALERT TECHNOLOGY, INC.            Topic: A03160

    This project's objective is to develop honey bee colonies as broad band, wide area detectors of airborne toxicants. Phase I focused on identifying behavioral endpoints that assess the locomotor and task solving performance of 'exposed' foragers returning to the hive. Preliminary results indicate that speed of maze navigation and recognition of 'exposed' foragers by entrance guard bees hold prom ...

    SBIR Phase II 2004 Department of DefenseArmy
  3. Biofilm Restoration for Contaminated Army Sites

    SBC: Mse Technology Applications, Inc.            Topic: N/A

    Many Unites States Army, and other Department of Defense (DoD) sites, are contaminated with a variety of contaminants including highly energetic compounds, such as 2,4,6-trinitrotoluene (TNT), hexahydro-1,3,5-trinitro-1,3,5-triazine (RDX), chlorinated aliphatics (such as trichloroethylene,TCE) and chlorinated aromatics. These compounds often persist in soil or groundwater for extended periods of t ...

    STTR Phase I 2004 Department of DefenseArmy
  4. Biofilm Restoration for Contaminated Army Sites

    SBC: Mse Technology Applications, Inc.            Topic: ARMY03T13

    Many Unites States Army, and other Department of Defense (DoD) sites, are contaminated with a variety of contaminants including highly energetic compounds, such as 2,4,6-trinitrotoluene (TNT), hexahydro-1,3,5-trinitro-1,3,5-triazine (RDX), chlorinated aliphatics (such as trichloroethylene,TCE) and chlorinated aromatics. These compounds often persist in soil or groundwater for extended periods of t ...

    STTR Phase II 2004 Department of DefenseArmy
  5. Innovative Manufacturing Techniques for Polysaccharide-Protein Conjugate Vaccines

    SBC: ENDOBIOLOGICS INTERNATIONAL CORP.            Topic: A03167

    This project develops a conjugate vaccine against Shigella flexneri 2a utilizing cGMP-compatible manufacturing processes. The antigenic component of the vaccine is deacylated-polysaccharide from the bacterial LPS that has an average of one O-antigen repeat unit per polysaccharide molecule. The polysaccharide is deacylated by a biological process, and has a core structure with intact phophosphory ...

    SBIR Phase I 2004 Department of DefenseArmy
  6. Innovative Manufacturing Techniques for Polysaccharide-Protein Conjugate Vaccines

    SBC: ENDOBIOLOGICS INTERNATIONAL CORP.            Topic: A03167

    There is need for a commercial vaccine against shigellosis because all groups of pathogenic Shigella have acquired resistance to antibiotics. Shigella conjugate vaccines have proven safe and protective in previous clinical trials, but obstacles associated with large-scale manufacturing of these subunit vaccines have apparently hindered commercial development. The present project uses a new and s ...

    SBIR Phase II 2004 Department of DefenseArmy
  7. Tungsten Carbide Nanoparticle Strengthened Tantalum Nanocoating for Engineered Gun Barrel Surfaces

    SBC: INFRAMAT CORP            Topic: A03013

    US Army seeks innovative coating technologies for gun barrel surface applications to replace currently available highly toxic electroplated hard chrome. Cylindrical magnetron sputtered tantalum (Ta) coatings developed by US Army labs revealed some success in explosive bonding experiments, however, issues include cost and softness of the unalloyed Ta. Inframat proposes to fabricate a novel tungst ...

    SBIR Phase I 2004 Department of DefenseArmy
  8. High Performance, Concealed, Ceramic-Based Armor Panels for Military and Commercial Vehicles

    SBC: M CUBED TECHNOLOGIES, INC.            Topic: A02241

    In a current Phase I program, an extremely capable team is developing an innovative approach to the design and fabrication of ceramic-based armor panels for commercial vehicles. The concept consists of two key features, namely (1) the use of 1-piece, large contoured reaction bonded ceramic tiles and (2) backing the tiles with low cost ballistic polymer. The resultant panels match the shape of in ...

    SBIR Phase II 2004 Department of DefenseArmy
  9. High Toughness, Hard Faced Metal Matrix Composite SAPI Plates

    SBC: M CUBED TECHNOLOGIES, INC.            Topic: A03179

    An extremely capable team of M Cubed Technologies and Simula is proposing to replace existing ceramic-based small arms protective insert (SAPI) personnel armor plates with hard-faced metal matrix composite (MMC)-based products. This new product will offer much greater durability due to the relatively high fracture toughness of MMCs relative to ceramics. In short, the program will produce MMC til ...

    SBIR Phase I 2004 Department of DefenseArmy
  10. Color-Based Polyoxometalate (POM) Cellulosic Detector Strips for Chemical Warfare Agents

    SBC: Materials Technologies Corporation            Topic: ARMY03T14

    The overall objective of this Phase II program is to produce, by the end of the two-year effort, a low-cost, ready-to-use, field-deployable simple kit comprising paper, wood or plastic strips that detect the principal chemical warfare agents (CWAs) - Mustard, Sarin, Soman, and VX - in liquid as well as vapor forms, by fast and dramatic color changes. Our Phase I work produced prototype demonstra ...

    STTR Phase II 2004 Department of DefenseArmy
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