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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.

Displaying 21 - 30 of 63059 results
  1. 1meV Electron Monochromator

    SBC: ELECTRON OPTICA INC            Topic: C5313a

    C53-13a-271127Electron microscopes have been widely used by material scientists, biologists, and industrial scientists to study the composition and chemical structure of materials with high spatial resolution. Aberration-corrected instruments can image individual defects and interfaces at atomic resolution, and continued advances in electron energy-loss spectroscopy (EELS) have made elemental anal ...

    SBIR Phase II 2023 Department of Energy
  2. Optimizing Solid Electrolyte and Air Electrodes for High Energy, 3D Na-Air Battery

    SBC: DAYLYTE, INC.            Topic: C5318c

    C53-18c-271136The lack of affordable large-scale batteries makes electric vehicles too expensive for most consumers and makes renewable energy storage financially impractical for almost everyone. Although Li-ion battery prices have fallen over the past three decades, they are threatening to rise higher as Li-ion production for electric vehicles is predicted to consume the world’s high-grade coba ...

    SBIR Phase II 2023 Department of Energy
  3. Development of Novel Ligands used in Sludge Washing for Produced Water Value Extraction

    SBC: GLYCOSURF, INC.            Topic: C5321b

    C53-21b-271141Unconventional REE sources, such as mine tailings, produced water, geothermal brines, and coal byproducts are abundant in the US, and each offers a potential means to diversify the critical materials supply chain. Unlike the concentrations of REEs in natural water sources, reported to be between 15 – 710 ng/L, the concentrations of REEs in the aforementioned unconventional sources ...

    SBIR Phase II 2023 Department of Energy
  4. Cryo-EM Grid Screening Tool

    SBC: Gregory Hirsch            Topic: C5327a

    C53-27a-271143Transformative advances in cryogenic electron microscopy (cryo-EM) have expanded our ability to visualize cellular and biomolecular structure, often at atomic resolution. However, a significant hurdle for achieving the full potential of cryo-EM, including work performed at facilities associated with DOE, involves difficulties with sample preparation. Reliably producing vitrified ultr ...

    SBIR Phase II 2023 Department of Energy
  5. Functional Gradient-Based Geometric Curve Synthesis for Dynamic Quantum Error Suppression

    SBC: ERROR CORP.            Topic: C5306a

    C53-06a-271155Harnessing the quantum state of nature holds tremendous potential for creating new quantum technologies that surpass the capabilities of current systems. To create these new technologies, precise control over the quantum state must be maintained while simultaneously suppressing noise processes that would otherwise lead to decoherence and inaccurate results. This project will address ...

    SBIR Phase II 2023 Department of Energy
  6. Electrodeposited Overlays for Improved Durability of Nuclear Reactors

    SBC: Faraday Technology, Inc.            Topic: C4720a

    C47-20a-271162Next generation molten salt reactor systems require the development of scalable processes to apply bimetallic structures of corrosion-resistant materials onto boiler and pressure vessels. This will improve the corrosion resistance, reliability, and lifetime of components in liquid-fuel and liquid-cooled reactors. Molten salts enable economical operation due to higher temperatures (>6 ...

    SBIR Phase II 2023 Department of Energy
  7. 2a. Efficient Monte Carlo Simulations in the Cloud

    SBC: RADIASOFT LLC            Topic: C5302a

    C53-02a-271164Research and development advances in novel nuclear reactor design for power production depend on computer simulations to validate efficiency and safety. Most existing simulation co des require training and expertise and have restrictive licenses that make them hard to acquire and use. One promising open-source code is easy to use and can spread its calculations across many computers, ...

    SBIR Phase II 2023 Department of Energy
  8. E4S: Extreme-Scale Scientific Software Stack for Commercial Clouds

    SBC: PARATOOLS, INC            Topic: C5302b

    C53-02b-271168The software used in High Performance Computing (HPC) and ArtificialIntelligence/MachineLearning (AI/ML) workloads is increasingly complex to maintain, install, and optimize. More problematic is the poor performance portability of applications between platforms, forcing site-specific re-engineering of codes. Existing solutions to deployment of AI/ML work?ows on commercial cloud envir ...

    SBIR Phase II 2023 Department of Energy
  9. Engineered Enzymes for Polyurethane Recycling

    SBC: Birch Biosciences, LLC            Topic: C5331a

    C53-31a-271169Significant technical innovations are needed to improve the economics of plastic recycling. Plastic recycling rates in the United States have been stagnant for more than a decade: less than 10% of plastics are currently recycled, and only 5.5% of polyurethane plastics are recycled. Plastics have become a major contributor to global warming, as emissions from global plastics productio ...

    SBIR Phase II 2023 Department of Energy
  10. Rapid and Tunable Cooling Technology for Vacuum Furnaces

    SBC: ADVANCED COOLING TECHNOLOGIES INC            Topic: C4918a

    C49-18a-271181The need for high-temperature furnaces for neutron scattering experiments has been increasing considerably. One of the major limiting factors of these furnaces is the cooling rate. Currently, the vacuum furnace relies on radiation to dissipate heat and takes at least 2 hours to cool the furnace low enough to safely open for a sample change. This results in significant limitations of ...

    SBIR Phase II 2023 Department of Energy
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