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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. A Cost-Effective Analytical Technology for Identification and Measurement of Greenhouse Gases

    SBC: Lenterra, Inc.            Topic: 47

    This project will develop a portable gas analyzer that is capable of identifying and measuring the concentrations of CO2, CO and other trace greenhouse gas constituents. The analyzer will combine a micro-gas chromatograph (GC) with a plasma detector based on Penning Ionization Electron Spectroscopy (PIES), and will provide sample identification that is independent of the GC retention time. In Ph ...

    SBIR Phase I 2007 Department of Energy
  2. A Cost-Effective Analytical Technology for Identification and Measurement of Greenhouse Gases

    SBC: Lenterra, Inc.            Topic: 47

    This project will develop a cost-effective analytical technology platform for identifying and measuring concentrations of greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide, methane, and nitrous oxide and trace greenhouse gas constituents such as carbon monoxide. The proposed analytical platform is based on Penning Ionization Electron Spectroscopy (PIES) in plasma. PIES technology relies on a simple analog ...

    SBIR Phase II 2008 Department of Energy
  3. A Low-Energy Low-Cost Process for Stripping Carbon Dioxide from Absorbents

    SBC: AIL RESEARCH INC            Topic: 13

    If CO2 could be scrubbed from the flue gas of power plants and safely sequestered, the country¿s most important source of electricity, fossil-fired power plants, could operate without emitting significant amounts of greenhouse gases. Although technology for scrubbing CO2 from flue gas is commercially available, it is far too expensive and requires too much energy to be widely deployed. This pro ...

    SBIR Phase II 2007 Department of Energy
  4. A New Class of Nanocomposite Treatment Media for Efficient Mercury Remediation

    SBC: NEI CORPORATION            Topic: 38b

    Mercury remediation in contaminated sites throughout the United States is currently being addressed by a variety of techniques, including the use of sorbents. Although a variety of sorbent materials for capturing mercury in contaminated water are available commercially, there is an opportunity to drastically increase the efficiency of the adsorption process, thereby lowering cost and remediation t ...

    SBIR Phase I 2008 Department of Energy
  5. A New Sorbent for Removal of Mercury from Flue Gas: A Lower Cost Alternative to Activated Carbon-REVISED

    SBC: NEI CORPORATION            Topic: 21

    The cost involved in reducing mercury emissions from coal fired power plants is an impediment to the implementation of new mercury emission standards, particularly in the older power plants. A number of different sorbent technologies have been considered in the recent past, the most prominent of them being activated carbon. However, the cost of the sorbent itself is high. Further, these treatment ...

    SBIR Phase I 2007 Department of Energy
  6. A New Sorbent for Removal of Mercury from Flue Gas: A Lower Cost Alternative to Activated Carbon-REVISED

    SBC: NEI CORPORATION            Topic: 21

    The cost of reducing mercury emissions from coal-fired power plants is an impediment to the implementation of new mercury emission standards, particularly in older power plants. The use of a sorbent to capture mercury from the flue gas is considered to be the most effective approach, but issues pertaining to secondary emissions and the degradation of the fly-ash byproduct (which results from entr ...

    SBIR Phase II 2008 Department of Energy
  7. An In-Situ Calibration System For The Motional Stark Effect Diagnostic On ITER

    SBC: NOVA PHOTONICS INC            Topic: 32a

    One of the responsibilities of the United States for the international ITER fusion project is to provide a motional Stark effect system for measuring the internal magnetic field profile. The measurement system will be necessary for plasma control and will enable the study of stability and transport. This project will design a complete and reliable in situ cali¬bration system to ensure the accur ...

    SBIR Phase I 2008 Department of Energy
  8. Automated Objective Speech Intelligibility Assessment System

    SBC: LI CREATIVE TECHNOLOGIES INC            Topic: CBD07106

    Based on our successful experiences in automatic speech recognition, we propose a unique and promising solution for the automated objective speech intelligibility assessment system. It consists of a pair of head and torso simulators placed at the same distance as typical face-to-face communication, a power amplifier, a laptop computer, a speech recognizer, and console software. The simulator has a ...

    SBIR Phase I 2007 Department of DefenseOffice for Chemical and Biological Defense
  9. Automated Objective Speech Intelligibility Assessment System

    SBC: LI CREATIVE TECHNOLOGIES INC            Topic: CBD07106

    Based on the success of our Phase I feasibility research, we propose to continue the project for the automated objective speech intelligibility assessment system. It consists of a pair of head and torso simulators placed at the same distance as typical face-to-face communication, a power amplifier, a laptop computer, a speech recognizer, and console software. The simulator has acoustic properties ...

    SBIR Phase II 2008 Department of DefenseOffice for Chemical and Biological Defense
  10. Combined Controls and Energy Storage for Distributed Wind Turbine Grid Integration

    SBC: PRINCETON POWER SYSTEMS, INC.            Topic: 04

    The unpredictability of wind power generation prevents utilities from dispatching wind energy to meet demand requirements and also prevents wind energy from being generated during peak demand periods when it is most valuable. There is a need for an integrated wind turbine controller and energy storage system that is dispatchable by the utility, while also time-shifting wind power to maximize its ...

    SBIR Phase I 2007 Department of Energy
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