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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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Inert-Gas Buffering for Particle Size Separation of Superconductor Precursor Powders
SBC: Accelerator Technology Corporation Topic: 3578953 In the fabrication of powder-in-tube (PIT) Nb3Sn superconductors, needed for high energy physics applications, the particle size distribution limits the final filament size to which the strand can be drawn. In previous work, a virtual impactor (VI) aerosol particle sizing process was developed to process powders with near-zero-defect removal of all particles larger than a desired threshol ...
SBIR Phase I 2005 Department of Energy -
High Performance Electrolytes for Electrochemical Capacitors
SBC: ADA TECHNOLOGIES, INC. Topic: 17a79591 High performance, long-cycle-life energy storage devices are critical in advanced transportation technologies, e.g., electric vehicles (EV) and hybrid electric vehicles (HEV). Electrochemical capacitors (aka, supercapacitors or ultracapacitors) are being developed as power assists for HEVs. However, a major obstacle in this application limited performance and short lifetimes, determined by ...
SBIR Phase I 2005 Department of Energy -
Thermal Management via Hybrid Wafers and Devices
SBC: ASTRALUX, INC. Topic: 29a79748S Silicon (Si) has been the workhorse of the electronics industry since the invention of the transistor, and engineers have found new ways to push the limits of processing speed and power handling ability of Si chips. Decreasing the gate lengths, increasing the number of processors per unit area, and increasing the clock speed has led to increasing the microprocessor computing power from 0.3 ...
SBIR Phase I 2005 Department of Energy -
Thermionic Conversion of Automotive Waste Heat
SBC: ASTRALUX, INC. Topic: N/A79590B Automobile engines generate significant waste heat, which could be recovered and converted to electricity to meet the growing demand for electric power. Thermionic emission allows waste heat to be converted, but traditional thermionic materials provide very low conversion efficiencies at the moderate temperatures (400-600¿C) found in an automobile exhaust system. Thus, there is a need t ...
SBIR Phase I 2005 Department of Energy -
A System of Observation, Analysis and Verification for the Stable Isotopes of Carbon Dioxide
SBC: Atmospheric Observing Systems, Inc. Topic: 08b78555S DOE requires rapid, cost-effective methods for measuring the isotopic composition of atmospheric carbon dioxide. For discrete sampling, the [13CO2]/[12CO2] ratio must be measured to a precision of 0.2¿. For continuous monitoring (e.g. a one hour period), a resolution of 10 times less (~3¿) is acceptable. The instrumentation must be robust enough to operate properly for a full range of ...
SBIR Phase I 2005 Department of Energy -
Expendable Probes for Carbon Dioxide
SBC: Atmospheric Observing Systems, Inc. Topic: 0878574S A wide range of practical instruments is needed for monitoring carbon dioxide concentrations of the land, air, and sea. Moderate accuracy and precision of order 1 ppm (dry mole fraction) will suffice. Expense, weight, size, and electrical power must be kept low to make the instrumentation applicable to a large number (~10,000) of one-way deployments per year. Accessible platforms include ...
SBIR Phase I 2005 Department of Energy -
Vertically Integrated Measuring and Monitoring Instrumentation for Terrestrial Sinks and Sources of Carbon Dioxide
SBC: Atmospheric Observing Systems, Inc. Topic: 0878556S A vertically integrated system is needed to quantify the sources and sinks of carbon dioxide for terrestrial ecosystems. The system requires a broad coherence across spatial scales ranging from sub-meter plots of vegetation and soils up to the full ecosystem. The coherence is enforced by an additional requirement that the results of each spatial scale support and verify the results of neig ...
SBIR Phase I 2005 Department of Energy -
Integrated Membrane Shift Reactor for Simultaneous CO2 Capture and Hydrogen Production
SBC: ELTRON RESEARCH & DEVELOPMENT, INCORPORATED Topic: 09b78283S Carbon dioxide (CO2) capture and storage is one of the solutions for reducing the global CO2 emission. The current challenges for CO2 capture are to reduce costs and to develop technologies that can be applied to the energy industry, which is one of the largest CO2 emission sources. Pre-combustion capture is an attractive technology that is currently under development to capture CO2 while ...
SBIR Phase I 2005 Department of Energy -
A 200 MHz High Power RF Amplifier
SBC: Fm Technologies Inc Topic: 3779197S When muon beams are produced for high energy physics research, they initially have transverse and longitudinal emittances that are too large. Low frequency amplifiers (200 MHz is desired) at high power and a power gradient of 5 MW/m are required to ameliorate this problem This program will develop a low frequency high power amplifier that operates at at least 30 MW, with 200 MHz amplifie ...
SBIR Phase I 2005 Department of Energy -
Breakdown Suppression in Accelerating Structures Using Electron Beam Processing
SBC: Fm Technologies Inc Topic: 37a78542S Intense, low emittance beams are required for muon colliders, storage rings, and neutrino factory applications. However, vacuum breakdown and high dark currents, which occur on copper and other electrode materials used in accelerating structures, impose limits on the performance. This project will develop in situ electron beam processing of the whole surface inside muon accelerating RF ca ...
SBIR Phase I 2005 Department of Energy