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Find similar grantsMedical Devices (MD) Topic is sponsored by NSF. Aims to develop novel medical device platforms and translate emerging scientific principles into health practice.
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Search similar grants →Based on current listing details, eligibility includes: Small businesses with fewer than 500 employees in the U.S. Applicants should confirm final requirements in the official notice before submission.
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Improving Undergraduate STEM Education: Education & Human Resources (IUSE: EHR) Program is sponsored by National Science Foundation (NSF). This program promotes novel, creative, and transformative approaches to generating and using new knowledge about STEM teaching and learning to improve STEM education for undergraduate students. It supports projects that bring recent advances in STEM knowledge into undergraduate education, adapt, improve, and incorporate evidence-based practices, and lay the groundwork for institutional improvement in STEM education. Professional development for instructors to ensure adoption of new and effective pedagogical techniques is a potential topic of interest.
Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) and Small Business Technology Transfer (STTR) Programs is sponsored by National Science Foundation (NSF). The NSF SBIR/STTR programs provide non-dilutive funds for use-inspired research and development (R&D) of unproven, leading-edge technology innovations that address societal challenges. These programs specifically foster and encourage participation by socially and economically disadvantaged and women-owned small businesses.
Agricultural Technologies (AG) - NSF SBIR/STTR is sponsored by National Science Foundation (NSF). The Agricultural Technologies topic supports innovations enabling farm production ecosystems that support the proper utilization of natural resources. Such technologies may encompass systems-level and multidisciplinary solutions to enable complex agricultural practices that support increased biodiversity balanced with yield production. Sub-topics include food waste mitigation, resilient supply & distribution, and other agricultural technologies.
Research on Circular Economy, Smart Manufacturing, and Energy-Efficient Microelectronics is sponsored by U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) Advanced Materials & Manufacturing Technologies Office (AMMTO). This funding opportunity supports innovative technology R&D across the manufacturing sector with a focus on circular economy, smart manufacturing, and energy-efficient microelectronics. While the stated deadline for full applications has passed, AMMTO frequently issues similar solicitations, and this highlights a relevant area of interest for the DOE.
Manufacturing USA Institute — AI for Resilient Manufacturing is sponsored by National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST). This funding opportunity supports the establishment and operation of a new Manufacturing USA institute focused on utilizing artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the resilience of U.S. manufacturers. The institute will develop cost-effective, AI-based advanced manufacturing capabilities, advance technology development, foster a skilled workforce, and develop shared infrastructure and facilities.
The joint NSF-NIH Smart Health and Biomedical Research solicitation supports high-risk, high-reward AI/data science work in health — $300K per year for four years, with 20+ NIH institutes participating. Here is how the program actually selects winners.
Read articleNSF 25-540 puts $30 million into roughly 29 awards across three tracks — TTP-E at $600K, TTP-T at $1.2M, TTP-P at $2M. Each demands a different posture on partnerships, prior NSF funding, and the mandatory $50,000 I-Corps Teams allocation. The May 19, 2026 deadline is a forcing function that strips ambiguity out of every PI's translation story.
Read articleThe National Science Foundation announced $1.5 billion over a decade for X-Labs — milestone-based, Other Transactions Authority awards built around independent teams of researchers, engineers, and entrepreneurs. The first two topics target quantum-enabled imaging and quantum interconnects. Here is what the new mechanism means for traditional grantees and what the first round actually demands.
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