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Award Data

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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. SBIR Phase II: High Efficiency Robocasting for Ceramic Product Application

    SBC: ROBOCASTING ENTERPRISES LLC            Topic: NM

    The broader impact/commercial potential of this Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) Phase II project is in the creation of commercial viability for 3-D printing unique ceramic structures by transforming 3-D printing of advanced ceramics into mass-production additive manufacturing. This will be a new capability for the US. The 3-D structures being considered can't be easily made with traditio ...

    SBIR Phase II 2015 National Science Foundation
  2. Hyperspectral Sparse Array Digital Imaging

    SBC: SK Infrared LLC            Topic: SB152006

    With this project, Skinfrared LLC in conjunction with Duke University, aims to develop a reconfigurable hyperspectral imaging system. Hyperspectral imaging systems (HSI) are important for determining the chemical composition of heterogeneous substances of a given scene. They have many applications in both military and civilian ranging from gas and terrain identification to food inspection. Current ...

    SBIR Phase I 2015 Department of DefenseDefense Advanced Research Projects Agency
  3. SBIR Phase I: Cognitive Radio Small Cell for Pervasive Coverage and Sustained

    SBC: K&A WIRELESS, LLC            Topic: EW

    The broader impact/commercial potential of this project includes three market segments and domestic/international collaboration in technology development and engineering training. The first market segment will be to provide first responders with a way to improve reliability in the communication for incident management through the deployment of on-the-scene smart self-configurable communication sys ...

    SBIR Phase I 2015 National Science Foundation
  4. Programming New Computers

    SBC: TRANSPARENT SKY LLC            Topic: SB151004

    Transparent Sky LLC (TSky), with research partner University of Florida (UF), commercialization partner Frontier Technology, Inc. (FTI) and development partner Lockheed-Martin Missiles and Fire Control, propose ENSITE, to provide a new framework for HPC at the edge that is particularly suited for ISR environments. Recent HPC advances have moved toward small, low-power embedded devices that can ra ...

    SBIR Phase I 2015 Department of DefenseDefense Advanced Research Projects Agency
  5. A Fast, Accurate, Massively Parallel, Particle-Based, Multi-Plasma-Model Simulation Tool

    SBC: VOSS SCIENTIFIC LLC            Topic: SB143002

    Efficient computational analysis of systems exhibiting complex plasma phenomena, including non-neutral kinetic, fluid behaviors with radiation transport are critical to many DoD missions.Examples of these systems include plasma thrusters, hypersonic vehicles, radiation effects simulations, RF sources, and compact neutron sources. Current simulation tools rely heavily on magneto-hydrodynamic (MHD) ...

    SBIR Phase II 2015 Department of DefenseDefense Advanced Research Projects Agency
  6. SBIR Phase I: Ecosystem for Learning and Team Design

    SBC: Imagars LLC            Topic: EA

    This SBIR Phase I project seeks to develop an innovative software prototype that uses pages out of electronic design (e-design) notebooks to automatically assess design activities from all the five stages of the design process (requirements modeling, functional modeling, concept design, embodiment design, and detailed design). The e-design notebooks are generated using tablets, or convertible lapt ...

    SBIR Phase I 2015 National Science Foundation
  7. Optical Refrigeration for Dramatically Improved Cryogenic Technology

    SBC: ThermoDynamic Films LLC            Topic: AF10BT02

    Solid-state refrigerators, which are compact and produce no vibrations, are ideal for many electronics and sensor applications. Currently, the dominant solid-state cooling technology is thermoelectric cooling, which uses the electrical Peltier effect. Despite decades of effort, the lowest achievable temperature for multi-stage thermoelectric coolers (TECs) is around 170 K. ThermoDynamic Films, LLC ...

    STTR Phase II 2015 Department of DefenseDefense Advanced Research Projects Agency
  8. SBIR Phase l: Micro-Robotic Wetware Development (MicRobowet) For Micro-Organisms Detection and Manipulation

    SBC: ENVIRONMENTAL ROBOTS, INC.            Topic: BT

    This Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) Phase I effort proposes to develop a micro-robotic wetware system (MicRobowet) in the form of an integrated microgripper/sensor array for active biological detection and robotic manipulation of micro-organisms such as bacteria, pathogens, metabolites, viruses, fungi, protozoa, lichens, slime molds, etc. in a wet water environment. In the Phase I effor ...

    SBIR Phase I 2006 National Science Foundation
  9. SBIR Phase I: CLEAR-View- A Cost Effective Thermal Imaging Sensor

    SBC: K&A WIRELESS, LLC            Topic: EO

    This Small Business Innovative Research (SBIR) Phase I project aims to design, test and implement a novel scene-based nonuniformity correction (SBNUC) algorithm for use in microbolometer-based uncooled thermal imagers. The approach relies on exploiting telescopic motion in the scene, in a video sequence, inherent in imagery acquired by a camera that is mounted in the front of an operating vehicle, ...

    SBIR Phase I 2006 National Science Foundation
  10. A Simple Ethylene-Detecting Device to Determine Ripeness of Individual Apples In Orchard

    SBC: RediRipe LLC            Topic: N/A

    Economic losses due to inadequate ripeness detection in the orchard and post-harvest continue to plague the apple industry. It is anticipated that the in-orchard/packinghouse sensor approach will significantly reduce the waste/spoilage-to-edible-fruit ratio, thereby increasing fruit quality and availability and resultant consumer demand at the domestic retail level as well as in the export market. ...

    SBIR Phase I 2006 Department of Agriculture
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