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FBO DAILY ISSUE OF SEPTEMBER 21, 2007 FBO #2125
SOLICITATION NOTICE

A -- Hyperadsorptive Atmospheric Sampling Technology (HAST)

Notice Date
9/19/2007
 
Notice Type
Solicitation Notice
 
NAICS
541710 — Research and Development in the Physical, Engineering, and Life Sciences
 
Contracting Office
Other Defense Agencies, Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, Contracts Management Office, 3701 North Fairfax Drive, Arlington, VA, 22203-1714, UNITED STATES
 
ZIP Code
22203-1714
 
Solicitation Number
BAA07-64
 
Response Due
11/6/2007
 
Archive Date
12/6/2007
 
Point of Contact
Peter Haaland, Program Manager, STO, Phone 703-248-1517, Fax 703-807-4971,
 
E-Mail Address
BAA07-64@darpa.mil
 
Description
The Hyperadsorptive Atmospheric Sampling Technology (HAST) program will develop systems that permit exhaustive, accurate, and economical collection of atmospheric trace constituents to support chemical mapping of urban and military environments. The system, which integrates three technical components, will demonstrate materials, packaging, and extraction technologies that sample atmospheric impurities whose concentration ranges from 10 parts per trillion to 100 parts per million by volume from 100 liter-atmospheres of gas in less than five minutes. In the second phase, a complete system that weighs less than one kilogram including power, indexing for one hundred samples, and GPS geolocation will be demonstrated. DARPA seeks innovative proposals in the following Areas of Interest: Technical Area One: Hyperadsorptive materials A central objective of the program is the quantitative, efficient and exhaustive collection of trace gases from the atmosphere. Media such as nanophase powders, aerogels, dendrimers, aerosils, zeolites, and porous solids may bind species whose atmospheric concentration is as low as ten parts per trillion or as high as one percent while failing to bind the primary constituents whose concentration exceeds one percent. Quantitative collection means that the atmospheric concentration of a gas can be inferred from the amount of material that is collected by hyperadsorbent media and subsequently analyzed in a laboratory. Efficient materials will accomplish this sampling using minimal masses and volumes of adsorbent and atmospheric gas, and will reject binding of the primary atmospheric constituents nitrogen, oxygen, and water vapor. Exhaustive collection implies that diverse atmospheric traces including organic, acid, halogen, noble, and organometallic vapors will be collected. Technical Area Two: Packaging Systems that automatically sample atmospheric species for subsequent analysis must be packaged so that media are kept free of contamination except when they are deliberately exposed to sample the atmosphere. Packaging must also ensure that media remain fresh before exposure to air and stable subsequent to sample collection without cross-contamination. Technical Area Three: Analyte Extraction New approaches to sample extraction from adsorbent media are sought to mitigate the impacts of chemical reaction during extraction that are inherent to the existing technologies based on thermal desorption or organic solvent extraction. NOTE: THIS NOTICE WAS NOT POSTED TO FEDBIZOPPS ON THE DATE INDICATED IN THE NOTICE ITSELF (19-SEP-2007); HOWEVER, IT DID APPEAR IN THE FEDBIZOPPS FTP FEED ON THIS DATE. PLEASE CONTACT fbo.support@gsa.gov REGARDING THIS ISSUE.
 
Web Link
Link to FedBizOpps document.
(http://www.fbo.gov/spg/ODA/DARPA/CMO/BAA07-64/listing.html)
 
Record
SN01411258-F 20070921/070920091702 (fbodaily.com)
 
Source
FedBizOpps Link to This Notice
(may not be valid after Archive Date)

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