SOLICITATION NOTICE
A -- MNK-BAA-02-0002- Part-2
- Notice Date
- 6/17/2002
- Notice Type
- Solicitation Notice
- Contracting Office
- Department of the Air Force, Air Force Materiel Command, AFRL - Eglin Research Site, 101 West Eglin Blvd Suite 337, Eglin AFB, FL, 32542-6810
- ZIP Code
- 32542-6810
- Solicitation Number
- MNK-BAA-0002-Part-2
- Point of Contact
- Brenda Soler, Contracting Officer, Phone (850)882-4294X3206, Fax (850)882-9599, - Martin Kradlak, Contracting Officer, Phone 850-882-4294x3402, Fax 850-882-9599,
- E-Mail Address
-
solerb@eglin.af.mil, martin.kradlak@eglin.af.mil
- Description
- NAVIGATION AND CONTROL TECHNOLOGY The Navigation and Control Branch (MNGN) is interested in developing inertial sensor components, GPS anti-jam and antenna technology, and advanced guidance and control techniques. Inertial sensor technology should be focused on developing technologies with the goal of achieving at least tactical grade performance with the potential for significantly reduced costs and size (less than $2K and 15 cubic inches per inertial measurement unit respectively). Inertial sensor technologies of interest include micromachined and optical. GPS technologies of interest are anti-jam techniques including spatial (beam forming and/or null steering) and temporal anti-jam technologies, and miniature GPS antenna technologies. Advanced guidance and control technologies of interest include: guidance law and autopilot designs that minimize redesign with each new weapon application, methodologies capable of identifying and tracking dynamic changes in the attitude of air-to-air targets, and integrated weapon guidance. Integrated weapon guidance includes guidance-autopilot integration, guidance-seeker-fuze-warhead integration, guidance-seeker integration, and total system integration to include hardware sensor integration. Mr. Pete Wise AFRL/MNGN 850-882-2961 ext 3337 fax: 850-882-2201 email: wisej@eglin.af.mil or Dr. Robert Murphey AFRL/MNGN 850-882-2209 ext 3453 fax: 850-882-2201 email: murphey@eglin.af.mil COMPUTATIONAL WEAPON/TARGET MECHANICS: The performance assessment and development of advanced conventional weapon systems requires the capabilities to model complex weapon/target interaction phenomena and to predict environments produced by impacting, penetrating, and detonating warheads. Modeling may be achieved with simplified engineering models or system/subsystem analysis codes, but the emphasis of this effort is the development and validation of continuum mechanics codes yielding high fidelity weapon and target models. Areas of particular interest include penetration mechanics, high strain rate fracture dynamics and constitutive modeling, fragmentation, localized shear band formation, and high pressure/high strain rate modeling of geologic and geologically derived materials, modeling of reacting droplet and particulate flows, hydrodynamic ram, atomization, accurate and efficient boundary interface treatments, the ability to span several orders of magnitude in spatial and temporal length scales and advanced numerical methods. Innovative theoretical, computational and experimental projects that specifically address the problems of interest and result in improved predictive capability are the goal. Dr. Lawrence E. Lijewski AFRL/MNAC 850 882-8302 ext 3346 Fax 850 882-2201E mail: lijewski@eglin.af.mil DAMAGE MECHANISMS RESEARCH The Damage Mechanisms Branch (MNMW) is interested in all aspects of Focused Energy Warhead and Unitary Warhead technologies as they apply to conventional munitions. Interests range from fundamental understanding of detonation wave implications for damage mechanism formation (i.e. explosively formed penetrators, stretch long rod penetrators, directed fragments) to shaped charge liner materials processing in the Focused Energy Warheads arena that is striving to reduce warhead size and increase lethality and adaptability for application to surface mobile targets and fixed targets. Interests range from fundamental understanding of material behavior in high rate, high-pressure processes (i.e., strain, erosion, toughness), to enhancement of existing blast/fragment warheads, to research and development of novel kill mechanisms for fixed surface targets, both soft and hardened, in the Unitary Warheads arena. For Focused energy Warhead interests call: Dr. David Lambert AFRL/MNMW 850 882-7991 Fax: 850-883-1381 e-mail david.lambert@eglin.af.mil For Unitary Warheads interests call: Dr. Mary Hughes AFRL/MNMW 850-882-7998 Fax: 850-883-1381 e-mail mary.Hughes@eglin.af.mil FUZE RESEARCH The goal of this work is to perform research in the areas of: shock hardened sub-munition fuzing and second safety environment for gravity released general purpose bombs. The shock hardened sub-munition fuzing should be capable of time delay functions or advanced post impact environmental sensing. The second safety environment for gravity released general purpose bombs. The shock hardened sub-munition fuzing should be capable of time delay functions or advanced post impact environment sensing. The second safety environment for gravity released general purpose bombs should replace the wind turbine fuze auxiliary unit (FZU-XX) providing a credible second environment after release of the munition. The research should incorporate state of the art technology and innovative methods to improve performance. Mr. Tim Tobik AFRL/MNMF 850-882-2005 ext 2005 ADVANCED ENERGETICS The Energetics Materials Branch (AFRL/MNME) is interested in energetics research proposals. This topic includes development of more energetic materials and/or combinations of materials including nanometric explosives as well as other high energy density materials. Also included are reactive materials comprising metastable interstitial composites (MICs) and/or metal fuels in combination with oxidizers and explosives. Constitutive modeling of these materials, including mesoscale descriptions of their dynamic mechanical response, initiation mechanisms and reactive equations of state are included as well. Novel approaches for formulating, processing, enhancing the mechanical properties (i.e., strength, toughness) and characterizing the special features of reactive materials and functionally graded materials in terms of their performance and energy release benefits are also of interest. Mr. Danny Hayles AFRL/MNME 850-882-4212 ext 106 e-mail danny.hayles@eglin.af.mil PART II PROPOSAL EVALUATION A. Proposals submitted in response to this BAA will be evaluated as received using the factors given below. The factors are listed in descending order of importance. No further evaluation criteria will be used in selecting the proposals. 1. The overall scientific and/or technical merits of the proposal, the potential contributions of the effort to the AFRL/MN mission and the extent to which the research effort will contribute to balancing this directorate?s overall research program. 2. The offeror's capabilities, related experience (to include past and present performance), facilities, techniques, or unique combinations of these, which are integral factors for achieving the proposal objectives. 3. The qualifications, capabilities, and experience of the proposed principal investigator, team leader, and other key personnel who are critical to achieving the proposal objectives. 4. The reasonableness and realism of proposed costs and fees if any, the proposed cost share by the offeror if any, and the availability of funds. B. Upon receipt of a proposal, the AFRL/MN technical staff will perform an initial review of its scientific merit and potential contribution to the Air Force mission and also determine if funds are expected to be available for the effort. Proposals not considered to have sufficient scientific merit or relevance to Air Force needs, or those in areas for which funds are not expected to be available, may be declined without further review. C. It is the policy of AFRL/MN to treat all proposals as privileged information prior to award, and to disclose the contents only for the purposes of evaluation. Proposals not declined as a result of initial review will be subject to an extensive evaluation by highly qualified scientists from within the Government. The offeror must indicate on the appropriate form any limitation to be placed on disclosure of information contained in the proposal. D. Each proposal will be evaluated based on the merit and relevance of the specific research proposed as it relates to the overall AFRL/MN program, rather than against other proposals for research in the same general area. PART III PROPOSAL PREPARATION Each proposal submitted should consist of two volumes. Volume 1 should provide the technical proposal and Volume 2 should address the price/cost portions of the proposal. Volume 1 should be limited to a total of 50 pages, including resumes, charts, figures, tables, etc. Pages in excess of the specified 50 pages will be removed and returned to the offeror before evaluation starts. A page is defined to be one side of an 8.5 x 11 inch piece of paper with information on it. Minimum print size is 10 point type, or 12 pitch. Every proposal shall have at least one copy submitted on disk or via e-mail with a hard copy of the signature page sent via regular mail. Proposals submitted on disk or sent via e-mail are to be submitted on Microsoft Office 97 format. Note: The preferred format for all proposals is via electronic means, whether on disc or via e-mail. The Government intends to work proposals and awards through electronic means. To do business with the Air Force Research Laboratory/Munitions Directorate (AFRL/MN), you must have software packages that are compatible with Microsoft Office 97. B. The technical portion of the proposal, Volume 1, should contain the following: 1. A title and abstract that includes a concise Statement of Work and basic approaches to be utilized. The Statement of Work should indicate the effort intended for each period of research. 2. A reasonably complete discussion stating the background and objectives of the proposed work, the approaches to be considered, and the resources to be employed. Include also the nature and extent of the anticipated results, and if known, the manner in which the work will contribute to the accomplishment of the agency's mission. 3. The names, brief biographical information, and a list of recent publications of the offeror's key personnel who will be involved in the research. Documentation of previous work or experience of the proposer in the field is especially important. 4. The type of support, if any, the offeror requests of the Munitions Directorate, e.g. facilities, equipment, and materials. 5. The names of federal, state, local agencies or other parties receiving the proposals and/or funding the proposed effort of a similar nature. If none, so state. 6. The identity of facilities, specialized equipment, or other real property to be used for the work, if appropriate for an understanding of the technical work to be conducted. 7. Identify all on-going Government contracts and related past contracts or assistance instruments. Provide a technical point of contact and telephone number for each contract cited. C. The cost portion of the proposal, Volume 2, should contain the following: 1. Proposal Pricing Cover Sheet for total proposal. 2. Summary by cost element and profit for each contract line and sub-line item and for the total proposal. 3. Labor summary for total proposal by categories, rates, and hours. Include an explanation of how labor rates are computed, including base rates and escalation. Show which are level of effort, if applicable. For proposals from universities, the times and amounts to be charged should be identified by academic year and summer effort. 4. Identification of indirect rates by fiscal year and explanation of how established and base to which they apply. 5. Bill of materials detailing items by type, quantity, and unit price, total amount, and source of estimate. Provide vendor quotes. 6. Summary of all travel by destination, purpose, number of people and days, airfare, per diem, car rental, etc. 7. Consultants by name, rate, and number of days or hours. Furnish copy of consulting agreement, and identify prior agreements under which the consultant received the proposed rate. 8. Other direct costs by type, amount, cost per unit and purpose. Specifically identify any costs for printing and publication and computers. 9. Subcontractor's proposal with prime offeror's price/cost analysis of subcontractor's proposal. If subcontractor was not competed, include justification. 10. Forecast of monthly dollar commitments for the proposed contract period. 11. Type of contract or assistance instrument proposed. (We expect most awards to universities and non-profit organizations to be grants.) 12. State whether you are a large business, small business, small disadvantaged business, woman-owned small business, HUBZONE small business, Veteran-owned small business, nonprofit, educational, or historically black college or university. 13. Other terms and conditions, if any. D. Grants, cooperative agreements, and other transactions are encouraged. Information regarding these can be found in the AFMC Homepage - site: http://www.afmc.wpafb.af.mil/organizations/HQ-AFMC/PK/pkt/jump.htm. The cost proposal should follow items one (1) through thirteen (13), above, as applicable for assistance instruments. E. Award of a grant to universities or nonprofit institutions, in lieu of a contract, will be considered and will be subject to the mutual agreement of the parties. F. The use of oral technical presentations is highly encouraged. Specific guidelines need to be followed for the use of oral technical presentations. For information regarding the use of oral technical presentations contact Brenda Soler at 101 West Eglin Boulevard, Suite 337, Eglin AFB FL 32542-6810, 850-882-4294, ext.3206. G. Options are discouraged and unpriced options will not be considered for award. H. The cost of preparing proposals in response to this announcement is not considered an allowable direct charge to any resulting contract, or any other contract. It is, however, an allowable expense to the normal bid and proposal indirect cost specified in FAR 31.205-18. I. The general scope for a program resulting from this BAA is a limited research program, generally a feasibility study. The program should be designed to demonstrate well defined and substantive research results, should not be overly ambitious or open-ended, and should not be a paper study that inherently requires a substantial testing effort. Any significant testing is unlikely; however there is a possibility of experimental testing to support battle lab experiments proposed under this BAA. The suggested guideline on price is up to approximately $300,000, but there is limited potential for larger awards depending upon the availability of funds, the scope of the work and the potential for a cost sharing contract or assistance instrument. Programs to support Team Eglin Technology Demonstration Programs will be considered under this BAA. J. Refer to the "Proprietary Information" and "When and How to Submit" sections of Air Force Material Command Unsolicited Proposal Guide, AFMC Pamphlet 64-101. The AFMC Form 190 is not applicable to BAAs. The guide is available at the following AFMC Publications site: http://www.afmc-mil.wpafb.af.mil/pdl/afmc/. K. Responders should reference the above number (MNK BAA-02-0002) and a technical topic and contact name. Proposals should be sent to Ms. Brenda Soler, 101 West Eglin Boulevard, Suite 337, Eglin AFB, FL. 32542-6810. This announcement is open and effective until superceded. Proposers are warned that only contracting officers are legally authorized to obligate the government. L. A National Agency Check will be required if it necessary for a Contractor to use Government computers. M. An Ombudsman has been appointed to address concerns from offerors or potential offerors during the proposal development phase of this acquisition. The Ombudsman does not diminish the authority of the program director or contracting officer, but communicates Contractor concerns, issues, disagreements, and recommendations to the appropriate Government personnel. When requested, the Ombudsman shall maintain strict confidentiality as to the source of the concern. The Ombudsman does not participate in the evaluation of proposals or in the source selection process. Matters of a routine or administrative nature concerning this acquisition should not be addressed to the Ombudsman but rather to the Contracting Officer, Contract Specialist, or the Program Manager identified above. For any other concerns, interested parties may E-Mail AFRL/MN's Ombudsman, Lt Col Mary T. Quinn, quinnm@eglin.af.mil
- Record
- SN00094600-W 20020619/020617213306 (fbodaily.com)
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