Sort
1,049,261 grants matching “t cell”
THE OFFICE OF ENERGY EFFICIENCY AND RENEWABLE ENERGY (EERE) IS ISSUING FUNDING OPPORTUNITY ANNOUNCEMENT (FOA) DE-FOA-0002922 ON BEHALF OF THE HYDROGEN AND FUEL CELL TECHNOLOGIES OFFICE (HFTO), WHICH COORDINATES HYDROGEN ACTIVITIES WITH OFFICES ACROSS THE DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY (DOE) AS DESCRIBED IN THE DOE HYDROGEN PROGRAM PLAN. THESE ACTIVITIES ALIGN WITH THE DOE NATIONAL CLEAN HYDROGEN STRATEGY AND ROADMAP AND SPECIFIC DOE INITIATIVES. AWARDS MADE UNDER THIS FOA WILL BE FUNDED, IN WHOLE OR IN PART, WITH FUNDS APPROPRIATED BY THE INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENT AND JOBS ACT,[1] MORE COMMONLY KNOWN AS THE BIPARTISAN INFRASTRUCTURE LAW (BIL). THIS FOA IMPLEMENTS SECTION 40314 OF THE BIL, WHICH AMENDED TITLE VIII OF THE ENERGY POLICY ACT (EPACT) OF 2005 TO INCLUDE A NEW SECTION 815, “CLEAN HYDROGEN MANUFACTURING AND RECYCLING” AND A NEW SECTION 816, “CLEAN HYDROGEN ELECTROLYSIS PROGRAM.” THE FOA LAUNCHES THE FIRST PHASE OF FUNDING FOR THESE PROGRAMS AND WILL PROVIDE UP TO $750 MILLION IN FEDERAL FUNDING, SUBJECT TO THE AVAILABILITY OF APPROPRIATED FUNDS. THESE ACTIVITIES WILL SUPPORT THE BROADER GOVERNMENT-WIDE APPROACH TO ACCELERATE PROGRESS IN CLEAN HYDROGEN TECHNOLOGIES AND MAXIMIZE THE BENEFITS OF THE CLEAN ENERGY TRANSITION AS THE NATION WORKS TO CURB THE CLIMATE CRISIS, EMPOWER WORKERS, AND ADVANCE ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE. THE FOA PROVIDES FUNDING FOR RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, AND DEMONSTRATION TO: IMPROVE THE EFFICIENCY, INCREASE THE DURABILITY, AND REDUCE THE COST OF PRODUCING CLEAN HYDROGEN USING ELECTROLYZERS TO LESS THAN $2 PER KILOGRAM BY 2026; ADVANCE NEW MANUFACTURING TECHNOLOGIES AND TECHNIQUES FOR CLEAN HYDROGEN PRODUCTION AND USE EQUIPMENT, SPECIFICALLY FOR ELECTROLYZER AND FUEL CELL TECHNOLOGIES; AND CREATE INNOVATIVE AND PRACTICAL APPROACHES TO INCREASE THE REUSE AND RECYCLING OF CLEAN HYDROGEN AND FUEL CELL TECHNOLOGIES. PLEASE SEE THE FULL ANNOUNCEMENT DOCUMENT AT HTTPS://EERE-EXCHANGE.ENERGY.GOV.
$4,199,888University Of North Dakota · · FY2025 · Department of Energy
DEVELOPMENT OF A NOVEL CELL-BASED, LIVE INFLUENZA VACCINE WITH UNIVERSAL ATTRIBUTES
$4,198,890Flugen Inc · · FY2019 · Department of the Army
Glutamatergic Modulators for Rapid and Sustained Antidepressant Effect
$4,198,428Carlos Zarate · National Institute Of Mental Health · ZIA · FY2016 · MH
Developing Immunogens to Elicit Broadly Neutralizing anti-HIV-1 Antibodies
$4,197,323Pamela J Bjorkman · California Institute Of Technology · P01 · FY2024 · AI
Molecular Basis of Cholesterol Metabolism
$4,197,287Joseph L Goldstein · Ut Southwestern Medical Center · P01 · FY2014 · HL
FLYBASE: A DROSOPHILA GENOMIC & GENETIC DATABASE
$4,196,566William Martin Gelbart · Harvard University · P41 · FY2006 · HG
Cancer Center Support Grant
$4,195,787Timothy J Eberlein · Washington University · P30 · FY2013 · CA
Cancer Immunotherapy
$4,195,237James L. Gulley · Division Of Basic Sciences - Nci · ZIA · FY2024 · CA
The American Lung Association (ALA) Lung Health Cohort
$4,192,016Ravi Kalhan · Northwestern University At Chicago · U01 · FY2021 · HL
Clinical Research Sites for the MACS/WIHS Combined Cohort Study (MACS/WIHS-CCS) - Baltimore/Wash DC Center
$4,191,059Joseph B. Margolick · Johns Hopkins University · U01 · FY2021 · HL
Genetic, Cellular and Molecular Mechanisms in Autoimmunity to Retina
$4,190,009Rachel R. Caspi · National Eye Institute · ZIA · FY2024 · EY
Genetic and Epigenetic Regulation of Gametophyte Development and Transposon Expression in Maize
$4,189,994Matthew M Evans · Carnegie Institution Of Washington · · FY2014 · BIO
Resources, Workforce Development, and Animal Models for the Rutgers RBL
$4,189,403David Alland · Rutgers Biomedical And Health Sciences · UC7 · FY2024 · AI
"IMPROVED, LOW COST, DURABLE FUEL CELL MEMBRANES."
$4,188,444Arkema Inc · · FY2008 · Department of Energy
Leveraging Genomics Resources and Wild Species of Tomato to Identify New Sources of Disease Resistance
$4,187,897Alan Collmer · Cornell University · · FY2011 · BIO
BRAIN CONNECTS: The center for Large-scale Imaging of Neural Circuits (LINC)
$4,187,111Anastasia Yendiki · Massachusetts General Hospital · UM1 · FY2024 · NS
JOINT CENTER FOR STRUCTURAL GENOMICS
$4,186,834Scripps Research Institute · P50 · FY2003 · GM
Understanding the functional impact of cumulative genetic risk in Alzheimer Disease
$4,186,727Suman Jayadev · University Of Washington · RF1 · FY2019 · AG
Optimization Of HIV Specific Immune Responses In Vivo
$4,186,577Robert A Seder · National Institute Of Allergy And Infectious Diseases · ZIA · FY2014 · AI
Optimization Of HIV Specific Immune Responses In Vivo
$4,186,577Robert A Seder · National Institute Of Allergy And Infectious Diseases · ZIA · FY2012 · AI
Optimization Of HIV Specific Immune Responses In Vivo
$4,186,577Robert A Seder · National Institute Of Allergy And Infectious Diseases · ZIA · FY2015 · AI
Optimization Of HIV Specific Immune Responses In Vivo
$4,186,577Robert A Seder · National Institute Of Allergy And Infectious Diseases · ZIA · FY2013 · AI
Microbicide Development Program (MDP)
$4,184,742Peter A Anton · University Of California Los Angeles · U19 · FY2008 · AI
FLYBASE: A DROSOPHILA GENOMIC AND GENETIC DATABASE
$4,182,365William Martin Gelbart · Harvard University · P41 · FY2011 · HG
THE GOAL OF THIS PROJECT IS TO ADVANCE THE SEARAY K2 AUTONOMOUS OFFSHORE POWER SYSTEM (AOPS) TO COMMERCIAL READINESS. AN AOPS IS A NEW CLASS OF WAVE ENERGY SYSTEM; IT IS A MULTI-PURPOSE PLATFORM THAT TARGETS BLUE ECONOMY APPLICATIONS OF PROVIDING POWER FOR REMOTE OFFSHORE AND SHORE-BASED MINI- AND MICRO-GRIDS. ONE TARGETED APPLICATION IS DELIVERING POWER AND DATA AT SEA (PDAS) FOR COMMERCIAL, DEFENSE, SECURITY, AND RESEARCH MARKETS THAT REQUIRE RESIDENT POWER AND DATA COMMUNICATIONS FOR THEIR OFFSHORE MOBILE AND STATIC ASSETS. WITHIN THIS APPLICATION, AN AOPS CAN BE THOUGHT OF AS THE COMBINATION OF AN OFFSHORE CHARGING STATION, DATA SERVER, AND CELL TOWER.
$4,182,275Columbia Power Technologies, Inc. · · FY2022 · Department of Energy