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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. Noninvasive Treatment of Hemorrhagic Shock

    SBC: ADVANCED CIRCULATORY SYSTEMS, INC.            Topic: A03178

    Shock secondary to acute blood loss remains the number one cause of death for our soldiers. Furthermore, heat shock and dehydration remain a common cause of cardiovascular collapse for our military personnel, especially as operations move increasingly into desert combat. The main objective of this proposal is to continue the development of the inspiratory impedance threshold device (ITD); an opera ...

    SBIR Phase II 2005 Department of DefenseArmy
  2. Vulnerabilty Assessment and Prioritization Methodology (VAPM)

    SBC: ADVENTIUM ENTERPRISES, LLC            Topic: SB052013

    This project will develop and deploy a comprehensive force protection vulnerability analysis process that accommodates diverse and large geographic areas, public events, infrastructure interdependencies, attacker goals, means, and methods, and defender priorities. This process will be based on the Vulnerability Assessment and Prioritization Methodology (VAPM) originally developed and applied to do ...

    SBIR Phase I 2005 Department of DefenseDefense Advanced Research Projects Agency
  3. Littoral Geoacoustic Surveys Using an Adaptive Network of Gliders

    SBC: Alaska Native Technologies, LLC            Topic: N04141

    Acoustic sensor systems are the backbone of both anti-submarine (ASW) and mine-countermeasure (MCM) systems. Inadequate knowledge of the acoustic environment, especially in denied areas, results from a lack of survey equipment, funding, and access to areas of tactical interest. Moreover, the acoustic environment can change substantially depending on conditions such as sound speed, water depth, an ...

    SBIR Phase I 2005 Department of DefenseNavy
  4. Low Fuel-Consumption, High-Altitude Capable, Heavy-Fuel Internal Combustion (IC) Engine Concepts for Unmanned Air Vehicles (UAV)

    SBC: BONNER MOTOR CORP.            Topic: A05054

    Internal Combustion engines (IC) are bound in their ability to create power primarily by the volume of air an engine is able to deliver to the combustion chamber. This formula has particular import at high altitude, where air pressure decreases, resulting in a correlative power loss. Traditional solutions for generating higher compensating air pressure are limited to external add-on devices such ...

    SBIR Phase I 2005 Department of DefenseArmy
  5. Nanocapsules for transposon therapy in cancer

    SBC: GENESEGUES INC            Topic: A04181

    Viral vectors are used in more than 70% of current gene therapy trials. However, immunogenicity, oncogenicity, and poor tumor transfection efficiencies present significant barriers to clinical success. Sleeping Beauty Transposon (SBT) technology, combined with a targeted, tumor-penetrating, non-viral gene transfer system, offers an alternative approach for therapeutic transgene production with lo ...

    SBIR Phase I 2005 Department of DefenseArmy
  6. Advanced Military Diesel Engine Technologies

    SBC: HANSEN ENGINE CORP.            Topic: A03233

    Diesel engines are attractive for military use because of good fuel economy and ability to use JP8-type fuels. However naturally-aspirated (n.a.) diesel engines have low power density, and small diesel engines are not amenable to turbo-charging. To overcome this disadvantage for weight-sensitive applications such as portable generators (gensets), the use of a novel supercharger is proposed. In ...

    SBIR Phase II 2005 Department of DefenseArmy
  7. Innovative Manufacturing Process Improvements

    SBC: HITCHCOCK INDUSTRIES, INC.            Topic: MDA04111

    This SBIR Phase I project will demonstrate both the technical and economic feasibility of using a fluidized bed system, initially developed for heat treatment, quenching, and aging of premium aluminum sand castings, to separate castings from sand molds, to de-core internal passageways in the castings, to reclaim the sand for re-use, and to use the binder resins from the molds and waste sand from m ...

    SBIR Phase I 2005 Department of DefenseMissile Defense Agency
  8. High Temperature POSS Resins for Filament Wound Composites

    SBC: HYBRID PLASTICS            Topic: AF02193

    The successful Phase I effort to incorporate POSS into BMI resin resulted in substantial Tg and HDT improvements while reducing the cure temperature. The proposed Phase II effort will optimize the formulaiton while characterizing the full scope and range of enhancement in filament wound composite structures.

    SBIR Phase II 2005 Department of DefenseAir Force
  9. POSS Nanochemical Technology for Radiation Hardened/Tolerant Systems

    SBC: HYBRID PLASTICS            Topic: MDA04036

    Hybrid Plastics proposes to develop a low cost, and versatile method for shielding commercial, military, and stacked microelectronics against the deleterious effects of space radiation. The technical approach utilizes metallized nanoscopic polyhedral oligomeric silsesquioxanes as conformal coatings or potting agents. Such coatings would permit spacecraft designers to use commercial ICs in applicat ...

    SBIR Phase II 2005 Department of DefenseMissile Defense Agency
  10. Radiation-Resistant Nanoscopically Enhanced Solar Cell Coverglass

    SBC: HYBRID PLASTICS            Topic: AF05022

    Hybrid Plastics proposes to develop a low cost, and versatile method for shielding commercial and military solar cells from damage against proton and electron radiation. The technical approach utilizes metallized nanoscopic polyhedral oligomeric silsesquioxanes as conformal coatings on coverglass and on solar cell surfaces. Such coatings would permit spacecraft designers to increase duty cycles wh ...

    SBIR Phase I 2005 Department of DefenseAir Force
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