National Science Foundation

The National Science Foundation (NSF), established in 1950 and located in Alexandria, Virginia, is an independent federal agency dedicated to advancing fundamental research and education across all scientific and engineering disciplines. With an annual budget of approximately $7.8 billion, the NSF operates America's Seed Fund, which allocates nearly $200 million each year to support startups and small businesses through the Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) program. This initiative provides non-dilutive funding of up to $1.5 million to assist in research and development efforts, thereby facilitating the transformation of scientific discoveries into commercially viable products and services. By helping to de-risk technology, the NSF plays a crucial role in fostering innovation and addressing societal challenges through scientific advancements.

James Donlon

Program Director

Sean L. Jones

Assistant Director for Mathematical and Physical Sciences

Sethuraman Panchanathan

Director

Ben Schrag Ph.D

Program Director and Policy Liaison, SBIR / STTR

Past deals in Vermont

Sperry Bio

Corporate Round in 2021
Sperry Bio provides the sperry micro-coring system, which is a medical device and has not been evaluated for marketing clearance. They address current prioritized objectives of regenerative skin medicine research programs within the army medical research and materiel command clinical and rehabilitative medicine research program.

Full Circle Microbes

Grant in 2020
Full Circle Microbes provides a waste disposal service that converts organic waste into fertilizer. The company was founded in 2019 and is headquartered in Hinesburg, Vermont.

CoreMap

Grant in 2020
CoreMap, Inc. develops a diagnostic technology for electrophysiologists for treating atrial fibrillation. It offers CoreMap micro-electrode solution for mapping tissue properties (ability to map sequentially). The company also provides CoreMap ultra-high resolution electrodes reveal the details of activation despite fibrillation. The company was incorporated in 2016 and is based in Winooski, Vermont.

ChameleonCloud

Grant in 2020
Cloud services have become ubiquitous to all major 21st century economic activities. However, cloud services and technologies can be significantly more powerful than they are now. A persistent barrier to further advancement has been the lack of a large-scale and open cloud research platforms. With funding from the National Science Foundation (NSF), the Chameleon project will provide such a large-scale platform to the open research community allowing them explore transformative concepts in deeply programmable cloud services, design, and core technologies. Chameleon will allow users to explore problems ranging from the creation of Software as a Service to kernel support for virtualization. This broad range of supported research includes many other areas such as developing Platforms as a Service, creating new and optimizing existing Infrastructure as a Service components, investigating software-defined networking, and optimizing virtualization technologies. The Chameleon testbed, will be deployed at the University of Chicago and the Texas Advanced Computing Center and will consist of 650 multi-core cloud nodes, 5PB of total disk space, and leverage 100 Gbps connection between the sites. While a large part of the testbed will consist of homogenous hardware to support large-scale experiments, a portion of it will support heterogeneous units allowing experimentation with high-memory, large-disk, low-power, GPU, and co-processor units. The project will also leverage existing FutureGrid hardware at the University of Chicago and the Texas Advanced Computing Center in its first year to provide a transition period for the existing FutureGrid community of experimental users. To support the broad range of experiments experiments described above, the project will support a graduated configuration system allowing full user configurability of the software stack, from provisioning of bare metal and network interconnects to delivery of fully functioning cloud environments. A special feature of Chameleon is that it provides for an exceptionally close integration of clouds and networks, which substantially enhances the capabilities of both. In addition, to facilitate experiments, Chameleon will support a set of services designed to meet researchers needs, including support for experimental management, reproducibility, and repositories of trace and workload data of production cloud workloads. The project is led by the Computation Institute at the University of Chicago and partners from the Texas Advanced Computing Center at the University of Texas at Austin, the International Center for Advanced Internet Research at Northwestern University, the Ohio State University, and University of Texas at San Antonio, comprising a highly qualified and experienced team. The team includes members from the NSF supported FutureGrid project and from the GENI community, both forerunners of the NSFCloud solicitation under which this project is funded. Chameleon will also form a set of partnerships with commercial and academic clouds, such as Rackspace, CERN and Open Science Data Cloud (OSDC), and will partner with other testbeds, notably GENI and INRIA's Grid'5000 testbed.

Biocogniv

Grant in 2020
Biocogniv Inc. specializes in developing artificial intelligence-powered diagnostic tools tailored for hospitals. Founded in 2019 and based in Burlington, Vermont, the company creates plugins for electronic health records (EHRs) that enhance clinical decision-making. Its initial product screens patients for COVID-19 by rapidly analyzing standard blood test results, achieving a sensitivity rate of 95%. Additionally, Biocogniv's technology aims to predict sepsis-related in-hospital mortality and the need for intensive care unit admission during emergency department visits. By seamlessly integrating with EHR workflows, Biocogniv's solutions facilitate accurate and non-invasive diagnostic methods, thereby improving patient outcomes and operational efficiency in the medical sector.

Rich Earth Institute

Grant in 2020
Rich Earth Institute conducts research, education, and technological development to advance the use of human waste as a resource. The company was founded in 2012 and is based in Brattleboro, Vermont.
Wildlife Imaging Systems is focused on providing advanced machine vision solutions to the research community. It develops a machine vision platform to help the research community conserve wildlife through video capture.

Norwich University

Grant in 2018
Norwich University is a nonprofit educational institution located in Northfield, Vermont, founded in 1819. It offers a diverse range of academic programs, including undergraduate degrees in liberal arts, sciences, and professional fields such as Architecture, Computer Science, Engineering, Pre-Law, and Pre-Medicine. The university is notable for its ROTC program, which trains cadets while also accommodating non-cadets who seek high-quality education. Graduate degrees are predominantly delivered online, with options available in Diplomacy, Education, Military History, Civil Engineering, Public Administration, and Nursing. Norwich employs an experiential learning model that integrates practical and theoretical approaches to education, enhancing knowledge retention. The university provides various financial aid opportunities, including loans, grants, and scholarships, particularly benefitting current and former military personnel. Admission requirements include submission of an application, a personal statement, transcripts, test scores, and letters of recommendation, which are strongly encouraged.

Resonant Link

Grant in 2018
Resonant Link LLC manufactures and develops wireless charging solutions by leveraging coil technology. Its products include Resonant Link’s multi-layer self-resonant structure (MSRS). It serves robot, drone, and electric vehicles industries throughout the world. The company was founded in 2017 and is based in Shelburne, Vermont.

Norwich University

Grant in 2018
Norwich University is a nonprofit educational institution located in Northfield, Vermont, founded in 1819. It offers a diverse range of academic programs, including undergraduate degrees in liberal arts, sciences, and professional fields such as Architecture, Computer Science, Engineering, Pre-Law, and Pre-Medicine. The university is notable for its ROTC program, which trains cadets while also accommodating non-cadets who seek high-quality education. Graduate degrees are predominantly delivered online, with options available in Diplomacy, Education, Military History, Civil Engineering, Public Administration, and Nursing. Norwich employs an experiential learning model that integrates practical and theoretical approaches to education, enhancing knowledge retention. The university provides various financial aid opportunities, including loans, grants, and scholarships, particularly benefitting current and former military personnel. Admission requirements include submission of an application, a personal statement, transcripts, test scores, and letters of recommendation, which are strongly encouraged.

Norwich Technologies

Grant in 2013
Norwich Technologies was founded in 2011 to rapidly develop and commercialize promising innovations in clean technologies. Their founders bring an exceptional combination of technical, legal, business and clean energy start-up experience.
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