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The Department of Energy issued Special Notice S-167749 seeking technology licensing opportunities for a van der Waals materials platform that generates tunable-index nanoscale orbital angular momentum (OAM) beams. The notice requests information about a compact, integrated nonlinear-optical platform to tune wavelength, OAM, and radial structure of vortex beams for applications in optical and quantum communications and sensing; work is to be performed at Los Alamos National Laboratory. Responses are due Feb 11, 2026 and this is a technology-licensing/tech-transfer special notice (not a grant).
Starbridge can help you:
Pain points mentioned in board meetings and strategic plans
Instantly outline and draft all requirements
Bring in your USPs and exploit competitor gaps
Starbridge can help you:
Get ahead of RFPs — target accounts planning budget or ending contracts soon
Accounts with contract expirations, meetings mentioning your product, grants, budget changes and more
Starbridge.ai books 30 - 40% of leads into meetings
Narrowband, mid-IR laser with tunable wavelength and tunable repetition rate to enhance advanced AFM metrology for measuring thermal properties of materials at the nanoscale.
Posted Date
Jan 15, 2026
Due Date
Jan 28, 2026
Release: Jan 15, 2026
Close: Jan 28, 2026
Narrowband, mid-IR laser with tunable wavelength and tunable repetition rate to enhance advanced AFM metrology for measuring thermal properties of materials at the nanoscale.
AvailableLos Alamos National Laboratory and the Department of Energy issued a technology licensing Special Notice for a Hydrogen Contamination Detector that enables real-time, in-line monitoring of hydrogen fuel purity to protect fuel-cell systems. The notice describes an electrochemical detector that operates with dry, high-pressure hydrogen and highlights TRL 6 and patent information. The opportunity is a Special Notice for technology licensing with a response deadline of February 12, 2026.
Posted Date
Jan 22, 2026
Due Date
Feb 13, 2026
Release: Jan 22, 2026
Close: Feb 13, 2026
Los Alamos National Laboratory and the Department of Energy issued a technology licensing Special Notice for a Hydrogen Contamination Detector that enables real-time, in-line monitoring of hydrogen fuel purity to protect fuel-cell systems. The notice describes an electrochemical detector that operates with dry, high-pressure hydrogen and highlights TRL 6 and patent information. The opportunity is a Special Notice for technology licensing with a response deadline of February 12, 2026.
Electroplated materials and array design for scintillators. Modern scintillator grids are essential to radiation detection systems that require high spatial resolution and fast response. However, current grid fabrication methods rely on hazardous chemical etching and produce inconsistent structures that limit performance, scalability, and safety. This capability addresses the limitations of current fabrication methods by eliminating hazardous chemical etching, improving uniformity, and enabling complex geometries at scale.
Posted Date
Jan 21, 2026
Due Date
Feb 11, 2026
Release: Jan 21, 2026
Close: Feb 11, 2026
Electroplated materials and array design for scintillators. Modern scintillator grids are essential to radiation detection systems that require high spatial resolution and fast response. However, current grid fabrication methods rely on hazardous chemical etching and produce inconsistent structures that limit performance, scalability, and safety. This capability addresses the limitations of current fabrication methods by eliminating hazardous chemical etching, improving uniformity, and enabling complex geometries at scale.
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is offering a technology transfer licensing opportunity for a diagnostic kit that detects SP22, a sperm membrane protein correlated with male fertility, based on patented technology (U.S. Patent 8,497,135). EPA seeks expressions of interest and will consider license agreements (exclusive or non-exclusive) to commercialize, manufacture, and market the technology; EPA does not provide funding through these license agreements. Interested parties should submit a license application to EPAs Federal Technology Transfer Act (FTTA) team and may reference EPAs FTTA web pages for application templates and instructions.
Posted Date
May 20, 2025
Due Date
May 14, 2026
Release: May 20, 2025
Close: May 14, 2026
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is offering a technology transfer licensing opportunity for a diagnostic kit that detects SP22, a sperm membrane protein correlated with male fertility, based on patented technology (U.S. Patent 8,497,135). EPA seeks expressions of interest and will consider license agreements (exclusive or non-exclusive) to commercialize, manufacture, and market the technology; EPA does not provide funding through these license agreements. Interested parties should submit a license application to EPAs Federal Technology Transfer Act (FTTA) team and may reference EPAs FTTA web pages for application templates and instructions.
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