You are here

Award Data

For best search results, use the search terms first and then apply the filters
Reset

The Award database is continually updated throughout the year. As a result, data for FY23 is not expected to be complete until September, 2024.

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.

Displaying 1 - 10 of 32571 results
  1. A High Channel Density Digital Acquisition System

    SBC: PACIFIC MICROCHIP CORP.            Topic: C5522a

    Nuclear physics (NP) experiments require large channel count detectors to accurately monitor, or trace events induced by sub-atomic particles. Gamma- and X-ray imaging and spectroscopy instruments are frequently utilized to detect, localize, and characterize nuclear materials, photons, or particles of light. These detector systems include a large number of simultaneously working detector elements. ...

    SBIR Phase I 2023 Department of Energy
  2. Applying Small footprint Borehole Electric and Magnetic Field Sensors for Geophysical Monitoring Networks

    SBC: PAULSSON, INC.            Topic: C5513c

    C55-13c-270336The Department of Energy’s (DOE’s) Carbon Storage program is focused on ramping up commercial scale carbon capture and geologic storage (CCUS) operations across the US to combat the release of CO2, a potent greenhouse gas responsible for global warming, into the atmosphere. Each one of these commercial scale operations will sequester greater than one metric megaton per year of CO ...

    SBIR Phase I 2023 Department of Energy
  3. HERON: Hydrological Enduring Remote Observation Network

    SBC: Arete Associates            Topic: C5516b

    Water management, stormwater control, and other flooding concerns present common and significant issues in many urban environments. As communities look to tackle issues related to urban flooding and streamflow, automated sensors that are low-cost and easy to install will be crucial to monitoring and restoration efforts. The unique challenges posed by urban stream monitoring require an innovative a ...

    SBIR Phase I 2023 Department of Energy
  4. Low-Cost Aerosol Size Distribution, Light Absorption, and Chemical Composition Instruments for Urban Monitoring Applications

    SBC: BRECHTEL MANUFACTURING, INC.            Topic: C5516a

    Our warming climate is amplifying environmental and human health problems in urban areas. Heat island effects, flooding, droughts, altered pollutant transport patterns, and human respiratory stress are examples of interactions between macro- and micro-climates that impact urban areas. The share of the global population living in cities is expected to rise to 80% by 2050, compared to 55% today. Emi ...

    SBIR Phase I 2023 Department of Energy
  5. Highly Efficient Low Loss Fiber-Chip Light Coupling for Quantum Networks

    SBC: HIGHRI OPTICS, INC.            Topic: C5504b

    Superconducting and photonic qubits are the leading platforms for quantum computation, now and for the foreseeable future, and will provide essential functionality to large-scale quantum networks. To achieve this, techniques are needed to coherently convert between the microwave states used by the qubits and optical states required for long-distance communication, a conversion that needs to occur ...

    SBIR Phase I 2023 Department of Energy
  6. Rad-Hard High-Dynamic-Range TEM Direct Detector

    SBC: DIRECT ELECTRON, L.P.            Topic: C5518a

    C55-18a-270598Although direct detection technology delivers substantially better image quality for transmission electron microscopy (TEM), its limited dynamic range and radiation sensitivity generally preclude its use for a variety of TEM applications. At present, direct detection is well-suited for biological cryo-EM, where illumination is relatively uniform and the electron exposure rate is limi ...

    SBIR Phase I 2023 Department of Energy
  7. Direct Real-Time GPU Access for Ultra-Fast Electron Microscopy Data

    SBC: DIRECT ELECTRON, L.P.            Topic: C5510a

    C55-10a-270599High-speed direct detection cameras have enabled a variety of experiments to probe structural dynamics in response to various stimuli. As microscope stages improve, it will become possible to capture these dynamics in three dimensions (3D) by repeatedly acquiring rapid continuous rotation tomography data. However, such data requires complex image processing to generate interpretable ...

    SBIR Phase I 2023 Department of Energy
  8. Automated STEM Distortion Correction for Arbitrary Scan Patterns

    SBC: DIRECT ELECTRON, L.P.            Topic: C5510b

    C55-10b-270600The electromagnetic coils in a scanning transmission electron microscope (STEM) suffer from hysteresis and have a finite rise time that slows their response to desired changes in scan position. As 2D and 4D STEM detectors and scan generators continue to increase in speed, distortions in the acquired data have become increasingly evident due to these adverse characteristics of scan co ...

    SBIR Phase I 2023 Department of Energy
  9. MHz sample delivery system for a seeded X-ray oscillator

    SBC: RADIABEAM TECHNOLOGIES, LLC            Topic: C5508a

    C55-08a-270680-AbstractTo enable exploration of atomic and molecular systems at the angstrom/femtosecond scales for interferometry and X-ray quantum science, few to tens MHz repetition rate XFELs can be utilized to pump and seed a cavity based X-ray oscillator. In this approach, an XFEL pulse (5-10 keV) serves as a pump, creating population inversion in a solid medium and resulting in highly coher ...

    SBIR Phase I 2023 Department of Energy
  10. Wide-scale Adoption through Visually-Enhanced HPC codes (WAVE-HPC) for semiconductor R&D

    SBC: EXABYTE INC.            Topic: C5501a

    While many ASCR-supported software packages are open source, these software packages are complicated to use, posing a significant barrier to many non-expert organizations. Even when the expertise required to install and use these packages is present, potential adopters lack options for the level of support, training, and personalized development required for usage across the organization. Without ...

    SBIR Phase I 2023 Department of Energy
US Flag An Official Website of the United States Government