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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. Time-Lapse 3D GPR Characterization and Monitoring of Near-Surface Groundwater and Contaminant Flows

    SBC: 4th Wave Imaging Corporation            Topic: 06

    According to the Environmental Protection Agency, federal, state and local governments and private industry will spend billions of dollars annually over the next several decades to clean up groundwater sites contaminated with hazardous waste and petroleum products from a variety of sources. As many as 350,000 contaminated sites, including many sites operated by DOE, could require cleanup over the ...

    SBIR Phase II 2006 Department of Energy
  2. Multi-Sampling System with Tree Architecture for Pulse Shape Analysis

    SBC: Katsman, Vladimir            Topic: 44

    Shape analysis of pulses collected from arrays of fast particle detectors used in nuclear physics experiments requires data processing systems with fast (>500 Ms/s) sampling rates, in order to preserve the pulse shape information. Existing systems rely on multi-channel analog-to-digital converters with a single-in/single-out architecture, 8-12 bit accuracy, sampling rate below 250MS/s, low compon ...

    SBIR Phase II 2006 Department of Energy
  3. Scalable Intrusion Detection System for Rapid Global Detection of Network Attacks

    SBC: Katsman, Vladimir            Topic: 40

    Current ultra high­speed networks carry massive aggregate data ¿ows that must be monitored and pro­cessed to detect and counteract intrusions. The problem is further compounded by the sheer number and complexity of attacks. As a result, the challenges of intrusion detection in ultra-high-­speed networks are outstripping our ability to de­tect, track, fuse, and interpret them. This project ...

    SBIR Phase II 2006 Department of Energy
  4. An Advanced Power Converter System Using High Temperature, High Power Density SiC Devices

    SBC: AEGIS TECHNOLOGY, INC.            Topic: 01

    Electronic power conversion systems introduce major cost and reliability issues in most distributed energy resources and energy storage systems. This project will develop a power conversion system based on an emerging wide-bandgap, SiC-based semiconductor technology. This system will be capable of operating at high power densities, high temperatures, and high frequencies, and will provide advant ...

    STTR Phase II 2006 Department of Energy
  5. Two Dimensional Chromatography of Atmospheric Aerosols: A New In-Situ Instrument

    SBC: AEROSOL DYNAMICS INC            Topic: 03

    Organic matter is a major constituent of airborne particles, comprising 20-50% of their mass. Identification of its components is critical for tracing sources, elucidating transformation and formation processes, assessing affects on human health, and assessing affects on global climate. Therefore, in situ, high-time-resolution comprehensive measurements of organic aerosol speciation are required. ...

    STTR Phase II 2006 Department of Energy
  6. Innovative Modular, Multiple Power Levels, 325 MHz Spokes Cavities Power Couplers

    SBC: Amac International, Inc.            Topic: 37

    In order to increase proton energy up to 8 GeV in a driver linear accelerator, particles must be accelerated through various stages and three different power levels (25kW, 100 kW, and 210kw). Unfortunately, no power coupler element for these cavities has ever been produced using U.S. industrial capabilities. This project will develop innovative modular, multiple power level, 325 MHz spoke caviti ...

    SBIR Phase II 2006 Department of Energy
  7. Ultra High Speed Transport Protocol and Architecture

    SBC: Broadata Communications, Inc.            Topic: 40

    Emerging distributed science applications are expected to generate petabytes of data that must be transferred to geographically distributed tera-scale computing facilities. Ultra-high bandwidth will be needed to achieve this transfer. While the bandwidth is available in network link technology, transport architectural inefficiencies severely limit the throughput attainable over such links. This ...

    SBIR Phase II 2006 Department of Energy
  8. Universal Probe Reagents for Detection and Quantitation of RNA Splicing

    SBC: Callida Genomics Inc.            Topic: 05

    The number of genes in the genome of higher organisms is relatively small; however, the protein complexity arising from these genes has been shown to be much higher. In part, this is due to alternative splice variants that are created during the processing of gene transcripts. The formation of gene splice variants has implications for human disease (for example, in cancer susceptibility) and als ...

    SBIR Phase II 2006 Department of Energy
  9. An Integrated Authorization and Intrusion Detection System for GMPLS Control Plane

    SBC: COMPUTER NETWORKS & SOFTWARE, INC.            Topic: 40

    Networking and security technology have become inextricably linked as enterprises rely on computer networks for everyday operations. It is imperative to integrate several types of security technologies into the network to foil various kinds of attacks before they can do any damage. Generalized Multiple Protocol Label Switching (GMPLS) has extended Multi-Protocol Label Switching to provide the co ...

    SBIR Phase II 2006 Department of Energy
  10. Extreme Environment Control Sensors

    SBC: LUNA INNOVATIONS INCORPORATED            Topic: 25

    Generation-IV reactor plants have the potential to drastically reduce our dependence on foreign oil and to reduce emission of greenhouse gasses. These plants will require reliable, high-temperature physical sensors that can operate at temperatures of 800°C to 1000°C and pressures up to 1000psi, while undergoing heavy irradiation. Conventional temperature and pressure sensors in nuclear and non ...

    SBIR Phase II 2006 Department of Energy
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