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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. Low-Cost Biological Solution for Reducing Carbon Pollution in Chemical Manufacturing

    SBC: INDUSTRIAL MICROBES INC            Topic: 14NCER1A

    Industrial Microbes is developing a green fermentation platform to replace carbon-emitting petrochemical production with newer methods that build chemicals out of methane and carbon dioxide.Chemical production is a major source of carbon pollution, responsible for 18% of direct industrialemissions. Our innovation is an engineered microbe that can consume carbon dioxide and methane and produce a ch ...

    SBIR Phase II 2016 Environmental Protection Agency
  2. Biofueled Thermoelectric Cookstove

    SBC: HI-Z TECHNOLOGY, INC.            Topic: 15NCER02

    Over 50 million Indian households cook on a bio-mass fire and have unreliable or no electricity but are anxious to purchase an affordable power stove which will provide on-demand power and lighting to their homes. Annually, projected sales of the power stove could save sixteen million trees, reduce cooking fire particulates by 90%, reduce the two million premature deaths caused from indoor air pol ...

    SBIR Phase I 2016 Environmental Protection Agency
  3. High-Efficiency Nutrient Removal and Recovery for Achieving Low Regulatory Limits

    SBC: MICROVI BIOTECH, INC.            Topic: 15NCER05

    Discharge of nutrients (e.g. phosphorus and ammonia) to surface waters can cause eutrophication and the formation of toxic algal blooms, threatening human health and the environment. However, current phosphorus treatment technologies such as chemical precipitation and conventional biological systems can be costly and ineffective to reliably achieve impending effluent regulatory limits of

    SBIR Phase I 2016 Environmental Protection Agency
  4. Reinforced Additively Manufactured Compression Assisted Molding (RAMCAM) of On-Demand Environmentally Stable Structural Composite Parts

    SBC: SAN DIEGO COMPOSITES, INC.            Topic: DLA152001

    San Diego Composites, Inc. (SDC) is developing the Reinforced Additively Manufactured Compression Assisted Molding (RAMCAM) pod to produce on-demand, corrosion resistant, aluminum and stainless steel equivalent parts in less than three days. RAMCAM combines the advantageous 2 day lead time of custom parts produced by 3D printing with the 1 day forging of structural parts via composite compression ...

    SBIR Phase II 2016 Department of DefenseDefense Logistics Agency
  5. Automated Vision Tester Technology Development for Aircrew Clinical Vision Screening

    SBC: SA PHOTONICS, LLC            Topic: DHP16004

    Existing visual screening devices consist of illuminated test cards. By rotating the knob, images may be changed; however, once the system is loaded with cards it cannot be easily reconfigured. There are a limited number of cards that a unit can hold at one time, and it is impossible to change cards on the fly if a patients vision needs further investigation or if the clinician wants to do variabl ...

    SBIR Phase I 2016 Department of DefenseDefense Health Agency
  6. Device to Prevent Retained Hemothorax

    SBC: CRITICAL INNOVATIONS LLC            Topic: DHP16011

    Defense Health Program (DHP) seeks to develop a new and innovative medical device tailored to prevent or treat accumulation of blood in the pleural space after chest trauma or surgery (i.e. retained hemothorax). Critical Innovations, NeoMatRx, Milestone Strategies, and The FDA Group, in addition to consultant Captain David Plurad, MD, FACS (USN, Ret.), have formed a team of medical device experts ...

    SBIR Phase I 2016 Department of DefenseDefense Health Agency
  7. PHASE II: NON-TOXIC, HIGHLY-EFFECTIVE BIOINSPIRED CRYOPROTECTANTS

    SBC: X-Therma Inc.            Topic: DHP15013

    On-demand cell and tissue samples are critical for both mass trauma care and advanced personalized medical procedures and continue to grow in importance. Biological tissue banks to support these on-demand applications lack safe and effective long-term storage methods. Current cryopreservation techniques and protocols use toxic cryoprotective agents that prevent successful full viability recovery o ...

    SBIR Phase II 2016 Department of DefenseDefense Health Agency
  8. Ophthalmic Microendoscope

    SBC: HEDGEFOG RESEARCH INC.            Topic: DHP15016

    Ocular injuries have constituted approximately 13% of all casualties from Operation Enduring Freedom/Iraqi Freedom. Of 76 patients that sustained open globe injuries and underwent surgery at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center to restore vision, 38% ultimately went blind.In many cases, severely scarred corneas preclude adequately visualizing the retina and other intraocular structures to ...

    SBIR Phase II 2016 Department of DefenseDefense Health Agency
  9. Methodologies and Tools for Securing Medical Device Systems in Integrated Clinical Environments (ICE)

    SBC: REAL-TIME INNOVATIONS, INC.            Topic: DHP15004

    The focus of this effort is to enable the deployment of patient-centric and context-aware networked medical systems. Securing medical device communications is a foundational requirement before the Medical Internet of Things can become a reality. Devices and applications need to be provisioned with certified credentials; they need to discover each other through a secure discovery process; and mecha ...

    SBIR Phase II 2016 Department of DefenseDefense Health Agency
  10. Novel Supercooling Protocol for Long-term Storage and Banking of Penile Tissue

    SBC: X-Therma Inc.            Topic: DHP16012

    GU injuries have been amplified as dismounted patrols have increased and frequent exposure to improvised explosive devices (IEDs) in recent conflicts. Penile injury incurred on the battle field increases the complication of performing replantation surgery. Generally, more time is required beyond the available 6 hours of biological time after dissection for autogenous reconstruction. Promisingly, h ...

    SBIR Phase I 2016 Department of DefenseDefense Health Agency
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