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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. A Particulate Mass Flux Sensor for the Food Process Industry

    SBC: En'urga Inc.            Topic: 85

    Currently, there is no suitable method of monitoring the mass flux of particulate material such as flour, sugar, chocolate chips, etc. for a continuous production process. Therefore, many of the food products are manufactured using batch processes, with very high inefficiencies and wide variation in the quality of the end product. If a continuous particulate mass flux sensor were available, then f ...

    SBIR Phase I 2013 Department of Agriculture
  2. Solar Powered Colony Health Monitoring System for Pollinators

    SBC: NANOSONIC INC.            Topic: 813

    This project will provide researchers a valuable tool to better learn about bees in almost any enviornment. The self contained power through PV panels will allow these hives to be used without the need to an outside powersource. Researchers can monitor stationary hives, as well as commercial pollination operations. Apiarists can also use these hives to gather data and monitor their own colonies. T ...

    SBIR Phase I 2013 Department of Agriculture
  3. Tangler Technology, Advanced Mating Disruption that Provides for Rapid and Cost Effective Application

    SBC: RIDGE QUEST INC.            Topic: 813

    Many factors acting together, including concerns about worker safety, food safety, pesticide resistance and new regulations governing pesticides, have heightened grower awareness to reduce insecticide inputs and increase reliance on biopesticides. Foremost among the forces leading to change is the need to reduce input costs in order to maintain economic viability. Mating disruption is among the mo ...

    SBIR Phase I 2013 Department of Agriculture
  4. Remediation of soil and water contaminated with phenolic compounds using peroxidase from the biofuel crop, Camelina sativa

    SBC: MONTANA GLUTEN FREE PROCESSORS, LLC            Topic: 84

    23. Non-Technical Summary Phenolic and aromatic pollutants are commonly released into soils, water and the atmosphere from industrial, agricultural and human processes. Such pollutants include chlorophenols, creosote, and endocrine & #8208;disrupting chemicals (EDCs) such as estrogen and bisphenol A. Phenols and aromatics are absorbed by inhalation, ingestion, and skin contact. They can cross the ...

    SBIR Phase I 2013 Department of Agriculture
  5. Phosphate fertilizer recovery from anaerobic acid digesters in sewage treatment plants.

    SBC: Nutrient Recovery And Upcycling Llc            Topic: 84

    Facing strict effluent limits, municipal wastewater treatment facilities are dealing with increasing costs of treating phosphorus in their waste. Current technologies are capable of sequestering the phosphorus in an unusable form or capturing only a fraction of it. Nutrient Recovery and Upcycling, LLC is working on a technology that can recover 44% more of the phosphorus from municipal waste than ...

    SBIR Phase I 2013 Department of Agriculture
  6. SELF-POWERED PUMP TO EXTRACT WATER FROM A FLOWING WATER SOURCE

    SBC: PLIANT ENERGY SYSTEMS INC            Topic: 84

    The company intends the Ribbon Pump to be an economically sustainable technology; a version will be developed that can be manufactured, distributed and installed at a price and operating cost which is accessible to the most resource constrained farmers in less developed countries without subsidy. With conventional pumping technologies generally unaffordable, the poorest farmers, subsistence farmer ...

    SBIR Phase I 2013 Department of Agriculture
  7. Enhancing rural small business opportunities by developing a low cost heat source and developing the utilization of char as a soil amendment

    SBC: SYNTHIGEN, LLC            Topic: 86

    Rural communities that rely on, and are part of an agricultural-based economy where seed and grain cleaning facilities operate are plentiful in the Pacific Northwest and other parts of the U.S. Creating new opportunities for employment and income generation in these communities is frequently difficult because it can require considerable amounts of capital investment and new market development. We ...

    SBIR Phase I 2013 Department of Agriculture
  8. Development of a novel biocatalytic fatty acid decarboxylation technology for production of liquid biofuels

    SBC: ALLUVIUM BIOSCIENCES, INC.            Topic: 88

    Throughout the past decade, there has been increasing urgency to develop novel technologies for alternative energy sources. This is being driven by the consequential relationships of increased global consumption, rapidly diminishing fossil fuel reserves, growing national energy security concerns, and geopolitical factors, all of which translate into high oil prices for the end consumer. In additio ...

    SBIR Phase I 2013 Department of Agriculture
  9. Optical Communication Transceivers for Affordable Broadband Deployment in Rural Communities

    SBC: FREEDOM PHOTONICS LLC            Topic: 86

    1. Need and Purpose Rural areas of the United States have always been economically disadvantaged relative to urban areas. In rural areas, average incomes have been lower, poverty rates higher, and unemployment and underemployment have been more extensive. At present, with the advent of broadband communication technology, internet access offers the opportunity to break away from this rural disadvan ...

    SBIR Phase I 2013 Department of Agriculture
  10. On-board Electrochemical Oxygen Generator for Live Shipments of Wild Seafood and Aquaculture Products

    SBC: GINER INC            Topic: 87

    U.S. live fish exports are growing and have further potential for growth. In 2009 live fish U.S. exports were on the order of $44 million. In 2012, there was unique opportunity in the live eel export market and there were reports of $100-150 million in exports in that species alone. The overall goal of this project is to provide active oxygenation during the transportation of live aquaculture prod ...

    SBIR Phase I 2013 Department of Agriculture
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