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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. FPGA-Based End-Station Security for High-Performance Networking

    SBC: Acadia Optronics, Llc            Topic: 52b

    Traditional enterprise cyber-security methods are inadequate to address the increasing number of threats, particularly within larger and higher-performance networks. Several government and third party organizations report consistent failures within corporate and federal, state, and local government networks. A key point of failure in securing these networks is the centralized security architectu ...

    SBIR Phase II 2010 Department of Energy
  2. A Scalable Distributed Client Based Meta Search and Discovery Infrastructure

    SBC: Weblib, Llc            Topic: 64a

    Web searching has become a ubiquitous and indispensable activity for a wide spectrum of human endeavors. The success of Google and its competitors depends on extensive software and network infrastructures and costly hardware. Federated search engines, such as Science.gov, WorldWideScience.org and ScienceEducation.gov also run on powerful, albeit much smaller, server clusters that connect to divers ...

    SBIR Phase II 2010 Department of Energy
  3. An Absolute C02 Monitor with Extremely High Accuracy

    SBC: AERODYNE RESEARCH INC            Topic: 43b

    Carbon dioxide is monitored with high precision at hundreds of monitoring stations, world-wide. Those measurements rely upon frequent calibration using high pressure gas cylinders, which must be certified and then shipped to remote locations. Current calibration procedures are both labor intensive and expensive. Continuous monitoring of CO2 at remote locations presents particularly difficult cali ...

    STTR Phase II 2010 Department of Energy
  4. High Precision C0S Monitor to Constrain the Partitioning of C02 Fluxes

    SBC: AERODYNE RESEARCH INC            Topic: 43a

    Assessment of CO2 exchange between the atmosphere and the biosphere remains one of the largest uncertainties in predicting carbon sequestration by vegetative uptake on a global basis. Distinguishing between photosynthetic uptake and respiratory emission of CO2 is difficult, due to the small differences between two large parameters, but crucial for determining net ecosystem exchange for CO2 betwee ...

    SBIR Phase II 2010 Department of Energy
  5. Development and Characterization of a Compact Aerosol Chemical Speciation Monitor (ACSM)

    SBC: AERODYNE RESEARCH INC            Topic: 44c

    Aerosol particles have important impacts on visibility, acid deposition, climate, and human health, although large uncertainties remain in quantifying their chemical composition and atmospheric transformations. A large fraction of the anthropogenic aerosol is generated from energy-related activities, and organic compounds are known to constitute a significant fraction of ambient aerosol mass. Or ...

    SBIR Phase II 2010 Department of Energy
  6. Volatility-Resolved Measurements of Total Gas-Phase Organic Compounds by High Resolution Electron Impact Mass Spectrometry

    SBC: AERODYNE RESEARCH INC            Topic: 44d

    Aerosol particles have important impacts on visibility, acid deposition, climate, and human health, although large uncertainties remain in quantifying their chemical composition and atmospheric transformations. A large fraction of the anthropogenic aerosol is generated from energy-related activities, and organic compounds are known to constitute a significant fraction of ambient aerosol mass. Re ...

    SBIR Phase II 2010 Department of Energy
  7. Bright Quantum Dot Scintillator for High Frame Rate Imaging

    SBC: RADIATION MONITORING DEVICES, INC.            Topic: 01a

    Recent significant improvements in synchrotron radiation sources have enabled the growth of powerful techniques such as time-resolved X-ray diffraction studies for use in understanding dynamic phenomena in materials, including those in biological systems. To make the most effective use of synchrotron sources for protein and other such studies, however, new, efficient, high-throughput detectors ar ...

    SBIR Phase II 2010 Department of Energy
  8. Low Cost, High Speed, High Sensitivity Detector for Material Science Studies

    SBC: RADIATION MONITORING DEVICES, INC.            Topic: 06c

    Advanced photon sources, capable of providing extremely high X-ray intensities, have proven to be outstanding resources for X-ray scattering and time-resolved diffraction studies of materials such as organic semiconductors used in electronics, photodiode, and photovoltaic applications, and biological materials such as non-crystalline biological systems. The problem, however, is in finding a detec ...

    SBIR Phase II 2010 Department of Energy
  9. Dual Modality Small Animal Imaging

    SBC: RADIATION MONITORING DEVICES, INC.            Topic: 40b

    The ideal biological imaging system would provide non-invasive, high-resolution, high-sensitivity, three-dimensional (3D) images of living systems. Positron Emission Tomography (PET) offers high sensitivity to a range of biological processes through the use of targeted radiolabeled probes. Unfortunately, precise signal localization can be extremely difficult due to low spatial resolution and the ...

    SBIR Phase II 2010 Department of Energy
  10. High Bandwidth Optical Detector for Scanning Probe Microscopy

    SBC: RADIATION MONITORING DEVICES, INC.            Topic: 05b

    The rapid advancements in nanosciences are pushing the limits of surface probe microscopy (SPM) technology. Of particular interest is the ability to extend the SPM bandwidth of detection. This would provide more specific molecular recognition and allow studies of interaction chemistry that, to date, have been inaccessible. It would also allow higher scan rates without compromising imaging resolu ...

    SBIR Phase II 2010 Department of Energy
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