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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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Retrofittable and Transparent Super-Insulator for Single-Pane Windows
SBC: NANOSD, INC. Topic: DEFOA0001429NanoSD, Inc. with its partners will develop a transparent, nanostructured thermally insulating film that can be applied to existing single-pane windows to reduce heat loss. To produce the nanostructured film, the team will create hollow ceramic or polymer nanobubbles and consolidate them into a dense lattice structure using heat and compression. Because it is mostly air, the resulting nanobubble s ...
SBIR Phase I 2016 Department of EnergyARPA-E -
Circuit board Component Recovery for Electronic Waste Reduction
SBC: Advanced Recovery and Recycling, LLC Topic: 14NCER1AElectronic Waste is the fastest growing waste stream in the US. Significant amounts are recoverable for reuse, resale, and refining for precious metals. The disassemblers send circuit boards to refiners/smelters for precious metals recovery. E-Waste disassemblers remove parts from these circuit boards, so only certain parts are smelted. As such they are the key market for our depopulator. Refiners ...
SBIR Phase II 2016 Environmental Protection Agency -
Production of Bio-Rejuvenated Recycled Shingles (BR2S) for Pavement Construction
SBC: BIO-ADHESIVE ALLIANCE, INC Topic: 14NCER5BThis SBIR Phase II proposal provides a sustainable solution for two major environmental challenges in the agriculture and building industry. In the agriculture industry, swine manure treatment is a major problem, both environmentally and economically. Currently, more than 120 million hogs being produced in the US per year, generating more than 6 billion gallons of swine manure that must be treated ...
SBIR Phase II 2016 Environmental Protection Agency -
Phosphorus recovery and high efficiency biological nutrient removal from wastewater with an innovative aerobic granular sludge sequencing batch reactor process
SBC: DTEC SYSTEMS LLC Topic: 14NCER4APhosphorus is a nutrient essential to all life, yet phosphate rock used for fertilizer is a finite resource which is rapidly being depleted. Yet, excess phosphorus from wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs) is causing eutrophication and degradation water quality. There is a critical need for wastewater treatment technologies that will remove and recover more phosphorus for beneficial use in food pro ...
SBIR Phase II 2016 Environmental Protection Agency -
Phosphorus Removal and Recovery through Newly Developed Adsorption Technology
SBC: GREEN TECHNOLOGIES, INC. Topic: 14NCER4ACommonly used water treatment approaches to mitigate phosphorus pollution and its consequences in small watersheds include the use of chemicals to precipitate phosphorus or algaecides to terminate algal growth. Both approaches require the addition of chemicals to the waterbodies resulting in biomass/sludge build-up, solid precipitates and/or potential toxicity from added metal salts. There is a hi ...
SBIR Phase II 2016 Environmental Protection Agency -
Low-Cost Biological Solution for Reducing Carbon Pollution in Chemical Manufacturing
SBC: INDUSTRIAL MICROBES INC Topic: 14NCER1AIndustrial Microbes is developing a green fermentation platform to replace carbon-emitting petrochemical production with newer methods that build chemicals out of methane and carbon dioxide.Chemical production is a major source of carbon pollution, responsible for 18% of direct industrialemissions. Our innovation is an engineered microbe that can consume carbon dioxide and methane and produce a ch ...
SBIR Phase II 2016 Environmental Protection Agency -
An Alternative Concrete Chemistry with Significantly Enhanced Durability, Sustainability, Economy, Safety and Strength
SBC: METNA CO Topic: 14NCER5AManufacturing of Portland cement, the primary binder in concrete, accounts for ~7% of global CO2 emissions, 4% of energy use, and exhaustion of natural resources. Premature aging of concrete in infrastructure systems is another major concern. A robust binder chemistry has been developed to overcome these drawbacks. The original approach to production of this binder, however, is not compatible ...
SBIR Phase II 2016 Environmental Protection Agency -
Industrial Process Pollution Reduction by Development of Amorphous Biogenic Silica to Replace Fumed Silica
SBC: SioTeX Corporation Topic: 14NCER1AFumed silica is an important additive in many products including paints, plastics and tires, but it is produced by an energy-intensive costly, toxic and hazardous process. SioTex has developed a superior triple green replacement for fumed silica that produces no toxic waste, uses little energy, and is inexpensive. Our patent pending technology uses rice hulls, a bio-waste, as the feedstock. Us ...
SBIR Phase II 2016 Environmental Protection Agency -
Cost-effective Molecularly Imprinted Polymer Based Monitoring Technologies to Improve the Performance and Reliability of Small Drinking Water Systems
SBC: SPORIAN MICROSYSTEMS, INC Topic: 14NCER4BSmall drinking water systems consistently provide safe, reliable drinking water to their customers; however challenges of such systems include; lack of financial resources, aging infrastructure, lack of scale, and technical/logistical challenges associated with regulation compliance. The deployment ofnew cost-effective monitoring technologies hold opportunities to substantially advance infrastruct ...
SBIR Phase II 2016 Environmental Protection Agency -
Isocyanate-Free Polyurethane Coating
SBC: TDA RESEARCH, INC. Topic: 14NCER3BPolyurethanes are now made by reacting two components, one of which has toxic isocyanate groups. Isocyanates are especially hazardous to workers that spray-apply polyurethane paints. Researchers have developed less hazardous ways to make polyurethane, but they have poor performance, cure too slowly or are too expensive. In this project, TDA Research, Inc. (TDA) will develop new non-isocyanate two- ...
SBIR Phase II 2016 Environmental Protection Agency