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Award Data
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.
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Radiation Resistant, Reconfigurable, Shape Memory Metal Rubber Space Arrays
SBC: NANOSONIC INC. Topic: T3NanoSonic has demonstrated that Shape Memory Metal RubberTM (SM-MR) adaptive skins exhibit reconfigurable and durable RF properties. It is hypothesized that such morphing skins shall also exhibit durable radiation resistance upon morphing; a property that few, if any, flexible materials offer. Typical highly filled or metal evaporated nanocomposites crack and spall upon flexation, and cannot be ...
STTR Phase I 2010 National Aeronautics and Space Administration -
Wide Range Flow and Heat Flux Sensors for In-Flight Flow Characterization
SBC: Tao Of Systems Integration Inc Topic: T2The tracking of critical flow features (CFFs) such as stagnation point, flow separation, shock, and transition in flight provides insight into actual aircraft performance/safety. Sensing of these CFFs across flight regimes involves numerous challenges such as a wide temperature/pressure range from subsonic to hypersonic flows. Tao Systems, Mesoscribe Technologies and Virginia Tech propose to devel ...
STTR Phase I 2010 National Aeronautics and Space Administration -
Wide Bandgap Nanostructured Space Photovoltaics
SBC: Firefly Technologies Topic: T3Firefly, in collaboration with Rochester Institute of Technology, proposes an STTR program for the development of a wide-bandgap GaP-based space solar cell capable of efficient operation at temperatures above 300oC. Efficiency enhancement will be achieved by the introduction of InGaP quantum wells within the active region of the wide-gap base material. The introduction of these nanoscale features ...
STTR Phase I 2010 National Aeronautics and Space Administration -
Nanowire Photovoltaic Devices
SBC: Firefly Technologies Topic: T3Firefly, in collaboration with Rochester Institute of Technology, proposes an STTR program for the development of a space solar cell having record efficiency exceeding 40% (AM0) by the introduction of nanowires within the active region of the current limiting sub-cell. The introduction of these nanoscale features will enable realization of an intermediate band solar cell (IBSC), while simultaneous ...
STTR Phase I 2010 National Aeronautics and Space Administration -
Position tracking and mobility assessment system for indoor monitoring of elders
SBC: EMBEDRF LLC Topic: NIADESCRIPTION (provided by applicant): The long term objective of this project is to enable elderly persons to independently live within their own homes later into their lives with the assurance that their safety and well-being can be remotely monitored by health care professionals. A critical component of remote health care monitoring is physically tracking the location of the patient within a livi ...
STTR Phase I 2010 Department of Health and Human ServicesNational Institutes of Health -
Development of a Peptidomic Rapid Point-of-Care TB Diagnostic
SBC: NEW YORK UNIVERSITY Topic: NIAIDDESCRIPTION (provided by applicant): The goals of this proposal are to devise rapid serological tests that can replace the sputum smear test for the diagnosis of active TB and meets the WHO specifications to replace microscopy in resource-limited countries based on immunodominant peptides from three M. tb cell-wall proteins. Although direct smear microscopy is highly specific, the test is tedious, ...
STTR Phase I 2010 Department of Health and Human ServicesNational Institutes of Health -
A cost-effective bioreactor to advance functional tissue engineering of cartilage
SBC: Apex Biomedical Company, LLC Topic: NIAMSDESCRIPTION (provided by applicant): Osteoarthritis (OA) is the leading cause of chronic disability in the United States. A clinical goal in the treatment and prevention of OA is to develop replacement cartilage using tissue engineering (TE) technologies. Although TE cartilage presently lacks the mechanical stability of native cartilage, studies have demonstrated that mechanical stability can be e ...
STTR Phase I 2010 Department of Health and Human ServicesNational Institutes of Health -
Conversations About Cancer (CAC): A Theatrical Production
SBC: KLEIN BUENDEL, INC. Topic: NCIDESCRIPTION (provided by applicant): Over the past decade, an investigation of how family members talk through cancer on the telephone has resulted in the recent publication of a lengthy volume entitled A Natural History of Family Cancer: Interactional Resources for Managing Illness (NH). Based on the conversations analyzed for this volume, and related research on the psychosocial impacts and con ...
STTR Phase I 2010 Department of Health and Human ServicesNational Institutes of Health -
Improving liver lesion biopsy in the CT suite through fusion with PET images
SBC: KITWARE INC Topic: NCIDESCRIPTION (provided by applicant): The broad objective of this proposal is to improve the clinical effectiveness of liver lesion biopsy by fusing respiratory-compensated PET with CT images in the CT suite. On CT imaging alone, localization of liver lesions can potentially be challenging, particularly in selected cases where differentiation of the tumor from adjacent liver parenchyma may be diffi ...
STTR Phase I 2010 Department of Health and Human ServicesNational Institutes of Health -
MDC-1231 for cancer prevention
SBC: Medicon Topic: NCIDESCRIPTION (provided by applicant): Strong evidence supports the notion that chemoprevention has the potential to be a major component of colorectal cancer control. The prevention of cancer depends heavily on the development of safe and effective agents. NSAIDs prevent colorectal cancer but have two major limitations that preclude their large-scale application to prevent colorectal cancer: a) sig ...
STTR Phase I 2010 Department of Health and Human ServicesNational Institutes of Health