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Award Data
The Award database is continually updated throughout the year. As a result, data for FY23 is not expected to be complete until September, 2024.
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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N/A
SBC: ADVR, INC. Topic: N/AN/A
SBIR Phase I 2001 National Science Foundation -
N/A
SBC: ADVR, INC. Topic: N/AN/A
SBIR Phase II 2001 National Science Foundation -
Phase-locked Fiber Lasr Array
SBC: ADVR, INC. Topic: N/AThe purpose of this Phase II effort is to build a rugged, compact optical phased array for coherent addition of laser beams, a crucial building block for multi-kilowatt continuous wave laser devices. This effort builds on the success of the Phase I effortwhere it was shown that an array of electro-optic waveguides in Potassium Titanyl Phosphate (KTP) could be used for phase control. The low-voltag ...
SBIR Phase I 2001 Department of DefenseAir Force -
Phase-locked Fiber Lasr Array
SBC: ADVR, INC. Topic: N/AThe purpose of this Phase II effort is to build a rugged, compact optical phased array for coherent addition of laser beams, a crucial building block for multi-kilowatt continuous wave laser devices. This effort builds on the success of the Phase I effortwhere it was shown that an array of electro-optic waveguides in Potassium Titanyl Phosphate (KTP) could be used for phase control. The low-voltag ...
SBIR Phase II 2001 Department of DefenseAir Force -
Intermodal Shipping Containers for Live Aquatic Product
SBC: Allied Engineering Services, Inc. Topic: N/AThe proposed research is to evaluate the feasibility of a volume transport and holding container for live fish and aquatic product. The proposed container would aerate, cool and circulate water using liquid air and no external power supply. The technology would allow a cost effective means to maintain a hibernation-like torpor in fish to overcome physiological constraints of volume live transport ...
SBIR Phase I 2001 Department of Agriculture -
Alternative Container Design for Large Acreage Revegetataion
SBC: Bitterroot Restoration Inc. Topic: N/ARevegetation of arid lands disturbed by fire, or by cropping, mining, and other activities, represent a continuous and substantial expenditure by the responsible entities. In 1999, the U.S. Department of Agriculture expenditures for the Conservation Reserve Program (CRP) in Washington were several million dollars. Likewise, fire rehabilitation work accounts for several million dollars annually. Th ...
SBIR Phase I 2001 Department of Agriculture -
Composite Supports for High Throughput Chromatography
SBC: CHELATECH, INC. Topic: N/AN/A
SBIR Phase I 2001 Department of Health and Human ServicesNational Institutes of Health -
Composite Supports for High Throughput Chromatography
SBC: CHELATECH, INC. Topic: N/AN/A
SBIR Phase II 2001 Department of Health and Human ServicesNational Institutes of Health -
SBIR Phase I: High Throughput, Ion Selective Metal Separation Composites
SBC: CHELATECH, INC. Topic: N/AThis Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) Phase I project will develop high throughput metal ion-selective separation composites for the extraction and purification of critical metals in production, and water and metal recycling environments. The problem this research addresses is the high cost and inefficiency of existing metal separation resins. Ion exchange processes operate by passing the ...
SBIR Phase I 2001 National Science Foundation -
COMPOSITE SUPPORTS FOR RAPID POLYNUCLEOTIDE SYNTHESIS
SBC: CHELATECH, INC. Topic: N/ADESCRIPTION (applicant's abstract): Modern DNA synthesis methods make use of porous solid phase supports that are used to immobilize the first base in the sequence. This process is inherently inefficient, because solutes and solvent flowing through a column of porous media prefer the path of least resistance. Flow naturally goes around the particles, rather than throug ...
SBIR Phase I 2001 Department of Health and Human ServicesNational Institutes of Health