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Award Data

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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. N/A

    SBC: AERODYNE RESEARCH INC            Topic: N/A

    N/A

    SBIR Phase I 2000 Environmental Protection Agency
  2. N/A

    SBC: AERODYNE RESEARCH INC            Topic: N/A

    N/A

    SBIR Phase II 2000 Environmental Protection Agency
  3. Remote Sensing Instrument for On-Road Heavy-Duty Diesel NOx and PM Emissions

    SBC: AERODYNE RESEARCH INC            Topic: N/A

    N/A

    SBIR Phase I 2001 Environmental Protection Agency
  4. N/A

    SBC: AERODYNE RESEARCH INC            Topic: N/A

    Not Available The proposed instrument will assist in the simultaneous chemical and mineralogic analysis of microsamples of soil, rocks and minerals by x-ray fluorescence and x-ray diffraction. The innovations include a compact, low-average power, high-peak power, microfocus x-ray source (tube) that uses a pulsed field emitter cathode (no thermionic emission) to produce a bright, x-ray microspot on ...

    SBIR Phase I 2000 Environmental Protection Agency
  5. MEMS Biosensor for In Situ Drinking Water Analysis

    SBC: AGAVE BIOSYSTEMS INC.            Topic: N/A

    The occurrence of causative agents such as Cryptosporidium parvum and other pathogens in water supplies presents a critical issue. Transmitted through water and animals, these organisms provide a reservoir of infection, which results in the excretion of the environmentally stable cysts or oocysts that are impervious to inactivation by many drinking water disinfectants. Cryptosporidium infections a ...

    SBIR Phase I 2001 Environmental Protection Agency
  6. MEMS Biosensor for In Situ Drinking Water Analysis

    SBC: AGAVE BIOSYSTEMS INC.            Topic: N/A

    The occurrence of causative agents such as Cryptosporidium parvum and other pathogens in water supplies presents a critical issue. Transmitted through water and animals, these organisms provide a reservoir of infection, which results in the excretion of the environmentally stable cysts or oocysts that are impervious to inactivation by many drinking water disinfectants. Cryptosporidium infections a ...

    SBIR Phase II 2001 Environmental Protection Agency
  7. N/A

    SBC: RADIATION MONITORING DEVICES, INC.            Topic: N/A

    Not Available Morgan Research Corporation proposes to develop a unique non-contact method of mapping the uniformity of carrier concentrations and absorption in binary and tertiary semiconducting compounds of zinc in the temperature range of 300K-77K (Phase I) and 300K-

    SBIR Phase I 2000 Environmental Protection Agency
  8. Portable Engine Emission Analyzer

    SBC: BOSTON MICROSYSTEMS INC            Topic: N/A

    A strategic need exists for harsh-environment, foul-resistant engine exhaust emission sensors. No presently available devices combine the requisite sensitivity and selectivity to hydrocarbons, CO, CO2, and NOx with thermal and chemical robustness, low power drain, rapid response, and reasonable cost. Boston MicroSystems, Inc., proposes to develop a hand-held portable engine emissions analyzer that ...

    SBIR Phase I 2001 Environmental Protection Agency
  9. Treatment of Produced Water from Coal-Bed Methane Production Using Carbon Aerogel Technology

    SBC: Bpf, Inc.            Topic: N/A

    N/A

    SBIR Phase I 1996 Environmental Protection Agency
  10. N/A

    SBC: COVALENT ASSOC., INC.            Topic: N/A

    Not Available Advanced detectors and detector arrays for high energy sensing can significantly benefit from the availability of small, low-noise, wire bondable resistors with less than 4% resistance changes from room temperature to 1 K. Similarly resistor arrays can reduce the bulk and simplify the circuitary in high energy detector arrays. Currently, the real estate needed for the resistors is la ...

    SBIR Phase I 2000 Environmental Protection Agency
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