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Award Data
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.
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Novel neutral antagonist for the treatment of opioid-induced adverse effects
SBC: AIKO BIOTECHNOLOGY, INC. Topic: N/ADESCRIPTION (provided by applicant): AIKO Biotechnology, Inc. is a start-up biotechnology company focused on developing safe and effective therapeutics for the management of pain and addiction. Opioid drugs are the standard of care in the treatment of pain. However, opioids produce a spectrum of adverse effects, including opioid-induced bowel dysfunction, that limit their clinical utility. Opioid ...
SBIR Phase I 2007 Department of Health and Human ServicesNational Institutes of Health -
Development of a selective biosensor for detecting organophosphate pesticide expo
SBC: ATERIS Technologies Topic: N/ADESCRIPTION (provided by applicant) This SBIR project is in response to the call for the development of field-deployable or wearable personal sensors for monitoring point-of-contact exposures to airborne chemicals through biosample testing. The broad objective of this proposal is to develop an extremely sensitive and selective biosensor device capable of detecting and discriminating protein ...
SBIR Phase I 2007 Department of Health and Human ServicesNational Institutes of Health -
New Experimental and Computational Tools for Tissue Engineering
SBC: Fluorescence Innovations, Inc. Topic: N/ADESCRIPTION (provided by applicant): Tissue engineering aims to create functional biologic prostheses by suspending dissociated cells into a biodegradable polymer scaffold upon which new tissue forms. Better means are urgently needed to compare engineered tissues, particularly cartilage and other soft tissues, with normal tissue. Histology is slow, cumbersome, and destructive because it requires f ...
SBIR Phase I 2007 Department of Health and Human ServicesNational Institutes of Health -
Laser pointing in a safe context for people with disabilities
SBC: INVOTEK, INC. Topic: N/ADESCRIPTION (provided by applicant): The proposed system offers people with severe disabilities an important new method for communicating when speaking is not possible. Presently all augmentative communication systems require a person to interact directly with that device in order to generate messages. This requires that a person have significant training in operating the device, and for many peo ...
SBIR Phase I 2007 Department of Health and Human ServicesNational Institutes of Health -
Reliable/Safe Laser Pointing-People Locked-in Syndrome
SBC: INVOTEK, INC. Topic: N/ADESCRIPTION (provided by applicant): The proposed project enables people with very limited movement to use a laser to control assistive devices - safely. This Phase 1 Fast-Track research focuses on developing a custom, low-cost, photosensitive material that detects the light from a laser. The fundamental scientific knowledge gained during Phase 1 will enable the research team to manufacture laser- ...
SBIR Phase II 2007 Department of Health and Human ServicesNational Institutes of Health -
BRAIN TEMPERATURE MONITORING IN NEONATES (PHASE II)
SBC: MERIDIAN MEDICAL SYSTEMS, LLC Topic: N/ADESCRIPTION (provided by applicant): Hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy (HIE) represents a serious problem in newborns, occurring in 3-9 of every 1,000 term infants, with about half of these HIE babies dying or suffering life-long severe handicaps, such as mental retardation or cerebral palsy. Current efforts to reduce the effects of HIE by hypothermia (cooling) have been hampered by the lack of a re ...
SBIR Phase II 2007 Department of Health and Human ServicesNational Institutes of Health -
Highly bright and narrow emitting nanocrystal fluoreagents for multiplexed detect
SBC: MESOLIGHT, LLC Topic: N/ADESCRIPTION (provided by applicant): Fluorescence-based multiplexed detection and spectroscopy is finding more and more applications in analytical chemistry, molecular biology, and medical diagnostics. For example, rapid advance in genomics and proteomics research has elucidated the availability of multiple biomarkers, of which simultaneous detection allow diagnosing the complex diseases such as c ...
SBIR Phase I 2007 Department of Health and Human ServicesNational Institutes of Health -
Making EHDI Decisions: An eDVD Tool for Families
SBC: MULTIMEDIA TECHNOLOGY DEVELOPERS Topic: N/ADESCRIPTION (provided by applicant): Congenital/prelingual hearing loss (HL) is one of the most common birth defects in the U.S. Infant HL occurs without respect to ethnic background, gender, or socioeconomic status. The aim of early hearing detection and intervention (EHDI) programs is to identify infants with hearing loss (HL) as early as possible so that the intervention process can take place ...
STTR Phase I 2007 Department of Health and Human ServicesNational Institutes of Health -
A Nanocrystal Biosensor for Detection of Multiple TBI Neurochemical Biomarkers
SBC: NANOMATERIALS AND NANOFABRICATION LABORATORIES Topic: N/ADESCRIPTION (provided by applicant): This SBIR proposal intends to develop a nanocrystal biosensor, which is capable of simultaneously detecting and quantifying multiple traumatic brain injury (TBI)-specific biomarkers in relatively small volumes of whole blood (0.1-1 uL). The biosensor design utilizes the well-known size dependent photoluminescence (PL) of the semiconductor nanocrystals to label ...
SBIR Phase I 2007 Department of Health and Human ServicesNational Institutes of Health -
Highly Bright, Heavy Metal-Free, and Stable Doped Semiconductor Nanophosphors for Economical Solid State Lighting Alternatives
SBC: NANOMATERIALS AND NANOFABRICATION LABORATORIES Topic: N/AAt present, the most economically efficient lighting technologies rely on discharge emission from mercury vapors. Mercury is also extremely toxic with the potential to accumulate in the human body over time. The alarming increase in mercury levels in our soils, sediments, and waters is driving the push to find economically viable alternative lighting sources that do not contain mercury. The obj ...
SBIR Phase I 2007 Environmental Protection Agency