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Air Force: AERIAL LAYER NETWORKING & TRANSMISSION TECHNOLOGIES
Deadline: Rolling Deadline
Funding Award Size: $1m - $10m
Description: AFRL BAA FA8750-23-S-7002 provides approximately $99.5M for Aerial Layer Networking & Transmission Technologies. White papers due by 0500 PM EST on 30 September 2027.
Below is a brief summary. Please check the full solicitation before applying (link in resources section).
Executive Summary:
The Air Force Research Laboratory (AFRL), Information Directorate (Rome Research Site), is soliciting white papers under BAA FA8750-23-S-7002 for advanced research in Aerial Layer Networking & Transmission Technologies.
This is an Open, 2-Step Broad Agency Announcement (BAA) focused on enabling self-forming, self-healing, resilient airborne networks that operate in contested and degraded environments.
White papers will be accepted until 0500 PM EST on 30 September 2027, and this BAA will close on 30 September 2027.
While submissions are accepted on a rolling basis, AFRL recommends aligning to fiscal year targets to maximize funding probability. If this topic aligns with your capabilities, early submission materially improves your chances of selection.
This is a multi-year, $99.5M opportunity with potential awards ranging from $1M to $10M — and up to $49.5M in certain cases.
How much funding would I receive?
Total BAA funding: Approximately $99.5M
Funding by fiscal year:
FY26 – $19.9M
FY27 – $19.9M
Typical individual awards:
Normally range from $1M to $10M
Period of performance typically not to exceed 36 months
Potential exists for awards up to $49.5M
Multiple awards are anticipated. The Air Force reserves the right to award zero, one, or more awards depending on funding availability and proposal quality.
What could I use the funding for?
Funding supports research, development, integration, test, evaluation, and experimentation of technologies for Airborne Network Connectivity and Dissemination, including:
Airborne Network Management & Monitoring
Self-managing and self-healing wireless networks
Software Defined Networking (SDN)
Network Function Virtualization (NFV)
Monitoring and management of tactical data link (TDL) networks
Robust Airborne Networking
Resilient networking in contested environments
Mesh networking technologies
RF front ends, radios, modems
Security and reliability improvements
Apertures and waveforms
Demonstrable Network Technologies
Advanced radios and networking technologies
Proof-of-concept demonstrations
Lower-cost demonstrations leveraging AFRL infrastructure
AESA-Based Tracking Systems
Analog active electronically steered array (AESA) technology
Embedded control solutions for modular AESA panels
Electronic tracking algorithms
Small form-factor RF hardware
Communications system integration and characterization
Both fundamental and non-fundamental research may be awarded. The Government retains sole discretion on instrument type and publication restrictions.
Are there any additional benefits I would receive?
Potential benefits include:
Ability to receive FAR-based contracts, grants, cooperative agreements, or Other Transactions (OTs)
For Other Transaction for Prototype (10 USC 4022) awards:
Potential transition to a follow-on production contract or transaction without further competition if the prototype is successfully completed
Engagement and dialogue with AFRL prior to submission
White paper feedback within 45 days of submission
What is the timeline to apply and when would I receive funding?
This is a rolling, open BAA.
White papers will be accepted until 0500 PM EST on 30 September 2027. The BAA will close on 30 September 2027.
Where does this funding come from?
Funding is provided by:
Department of the Air Force
Air Force Materiel Command
Air Force Research Laboratory (AFRL)
Information Directorate – Rome Research Site
Assistance Listing Number: 12.800
Statutory authorities may include:
10 USC 4021
10 USC 4022
10 USC 4023
Who is eligible to apply?
All qualified offerors who meet BAA requirements may apply.
What companies and projects are likely to win?
White papers and proposals are evaluated in descending order of importance based on:
Overall Scientific and Technical Merit
Related Experience relevant to USAF and Joint DoD missions
Openness, Maturity, and Assurance of Solution
Reasonableness and Realism of Costs
Projects that:
Advance resilient airborne networking in contested environments
Demonstrate operational transition potential
Leverage existing standards and capabilities
Present technically sound and executable plans
are aligned with stated priorities.
Are there any restrictions I should know about?
Key restrictions include:
Foreign participation is prohibited except as explicitly permitted for fundamental research
Classified work may require SECRET or TOP SECRET facility clearance
Export control registration (DD Form 2345) may be required
SBIR data rights are non-negotiable
Non-SBIR data rights are subject to negotiation
Cost sharing is not required and is not a selection factor
Certified cost and pricing data required for contracts exceeding $2M ($7.5M for small businesses or nontraditional defense contractors)
Human subject research requires IRB and AFRL-level approval
Security Risk Review required for Senior/Key Personnel and Covered Individuals
GAAP compliance required for OTs
SPRS Basic NIST SP 800-171 DoD Assessment required
AFRL supplemental OCI restrictions prohibit concurrent SETA/A&AS support and technical performance
Failure to follow white paper formatting instructions may result in rejection.
How long will it take me to prepare an application?
Step One requires a 3–5 page white paper including:
Title, period of performance, estimated cost
Task objective
Technical summary and deliverables
Formatting must comply with BAA instructions (double-spaced, 12-point font minimum).
If invited to Step Two, a full technical and cost proposal will be required per the AFRL BAA Guide and RI-Specific Proposal Preparation Instructions (latest versions).
Preparation time will depend on complexity. The solicitation does not specify expected preparation duration.
How can BW&CO help?
BW&CO can:
Assess strategic fit before submission
Refine your white paper to align precisely with AFRL evaluation criteria
Position technical merit and transition potential clearly
Structure cost strategy for FAR-based or OT pathways
Identify and mitigate OCI, FOCI, and S&T Protection risks
Support full proposal development if invited to Step Two
We ensure your submission is compliant, competitive, and aligned to Air Force mission priorities.
How much would BW&CO Charge?
We have both fractional engagements ($250 an hour) and full engagements ($4,000) available.
Additional Resources
PAR-26-040: Advancing Bioinformatics, Translational Bioinformatics and Computational Biology Research (R01 Clinical Trial Optional)
Deadline: June 5th, 2026
Funding Award Size: $250k
Description: NIH PAR-26-040 (R01 Clinical Trial Optional) provides up to $250,000 per year for innovative bioinformatics, translational bioinformatics, and computational biology research. First due date: June 5, 2026.
Below is a brief summary. Please check the full solicitation before applying (link in resources section).
Executive Summary:
PAR-26-040 invites research teams to lead transformational advances in bioinformatics, translational bioinformatics, and computational biology. This opportunity from the National Library of Medicine (NLM) supports projects that create cutting-edge methods, tools, and computational approaches for extracting actionable knowledge from complex biological and biomedical data. Applications open April 6, 2026 and follow NIH standard due dates (first due June 5, 2026). This initiative supports scalable, generalizable innovations that accelerate biomedical discovery and improve health outcomes.
How much funding would I receive?
Direct cost limit: Up to $250,000 per year (applicants must justify budget based on project needs).
Anticipated total program funding: Approximately $2,500,000.
Estimated number of awards: 10.
What could I use the funding for?
Fund research projects that:
Develop new computational methods and tools for bioinformatics and biomedical data science.
Leverage AI, machine learning, and large-scale computation to interpret diverse biological datasets.
Produce durable, generalizable artifacts (software, workflows, resources) that benefit the wider research community.
Enable translational insights with potential impact on health outcomes.
Excluded: incremental tweaks to existing tools, projects outside core bioinformatics/computational biology focus, social/ethical studies unrelated to computational method advancement.
Are there any additional benefits I would receive?
Projects are expected to produce open science outputs (e.g., FAIR tools, publicly available code, datasets).
Participation in NIH peer review and community of biomedical informatics researchers.
What is the timeline to apply and when would I receive funding?
Standard NIH due dates: June 5, October 5, February 5 recurring through 2029 (all due by 5:00 PM local time of the applicant).
NOFO expiration date: March 6, 2029.
Earliest possible project start: July 2026.
Where does this funding come from?
This opportunity is funded by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) through the National Institutes of Health (NIH), specifically the National Library of Medicine (NLM).
Who is eligible to apply?
Eligible applicants include:
Higher education institutions (public and private).
Nonprofits (with or without 501(c)(3) status).
For-profit organizations, including small businesses.
Local and state governments.
Tribal governments and organizations.
Foreign organizations (subject to NIH policies).
Important NIH policy: NIH will not issue awards for applications that include foreign subawards or subcontracts unless submitted to a NOFO specifically for international collaborations.
What companies and projects are likely to win?
Competitive applications will:
Demonstrate high innovation and impact in computational biology/bioinformatics.
Deliver tools and methods that are publicly accessible and broadly usable.
Show rigorous validation and clear plans for dissemination.
Integrate interdisciplinary approaches and emphasize scalability.
Are there any restrictions I should know about?
Foreign subawards/subcontracts are not allowed (projects with those elements will be noncompliant).
Cost sharing/matching is not required.
The project must align with NLM’s focus areas; non-responsive or tangential projects will not be reviewed.
How long will it take me to prepare an application?
Preparation time varies by complexity, but obtaining organizational registrations (SAM, eRA Commons) alone can take several weeks. Technical application drafting with rigorous computational research plans, data management strategy, and dissemination plans typically requires multiple months of coordinated effort.
How can BW&CO help?
BW&CO can:
Translate scientific aims into NIH-aligned application narratives.
Help articulate innovation, significance, and approach clearly.
Build budget justification and milestone plans that meet NIH expectations.
Develop data management, dissemination, and impact strategies that strengthen score.
How much would BW&CO Charge?
We have both fractional engagements ($250 an hour) and full engagements for submitting application ($13,000) available.
Additional Resources
PAR-26-042: Research Grants in Clinical Informatics (R01 Clinical Trial Optional)
Deadline: June 5th, 2026
Funding Award Size: $250k
Description: NIH NLM PAR-26-042 R01 funds clinical informatics research up to $250,000 in direct costs per year. Next deadline is June 5th, 2026
Below is a brief summary. Please check the full solicitation before applying (link in resources section).
Executive Summary:
This funding opportunity from the National Library of Medicine (NLM) at NIH supports investigator-initiated research grants in clinical informatics that develop innovative, generalizable methods and tools to transform complex health data into actionable knowledge and improve decision-making and health outcomes. Applications must be submitted by 5:00 PM local time on one of the standard NIH due dates (next dates include June 5, 2026; October 5, 2026; February 5, 2027, etc.) and the NOFO remains active until its expiration on March 6, 2029.
How much funding would I receive?
Direct cost limit: Up to $250,000 per year (applicants must justify budget based on project needs).
Anticipated total program funding: Approximately $2,500,000.
Estimated number of awards: 10.
What could I use the funding for?
Fund research focused on the design, implementation, and evaluation of clinical informatics tools and methods that:
Enable data-driven discovery and evidence-based decision-making.
Transform raw, heterogeneous health data (e.g., EHRs, clinical notes, imaging, patient-generated data) into usable knowledge.
Produce scalable, reproducible, domain-independent approaches broadly applicable across clinical settings.
Improve clinical workflows, predictive analytics, decision support, interoperability, and precision health.
Are there any additional benefits I would receive?
Potential to accelerate scientific insights and inform future research beyond the project period.
Alignment with NLM’s mission to advance data-driven biomedical research and healthcare.
Software, datasets, methods, and resources are expected to be disseminated widely to maximize impact.
What is the timeline to apply and when would I receive funding?
Standard NIH due dates: June 5, October 5, February 5 recurring through 2029 (all due by 5:00 PM local time of the applicant).
NOFO expiration date: March 6, 2029.
Earliest possible project start: July 2026.
Where does this funding come from?
This opportunity is funded by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) through the National Institutes of Health (NIH), specifically the National Library of Medicine (NLM).
Who is eligible to apply?
Eligible applicants include:
Higher education institutions (public and private).
Nonprofits (with or without 501(c)(3) status).
For-profit organizations, including small businesses.
Local and state governments.
Tribal governments and organizations.
Foreign organizations (subject to NIH policies).
Important NIH policy: NIH will not issue awards for applications that include foreign subawards or subcontracts unless submitted to a NOFO specifically for international collaborations.
What companies and projects are likely to win?
Competitive applications will:
Address transformative clinical informatics challenges and align tightly with NLM goals.
Demonstrate innovation, scalability, and generalizability beyond narrow disease-specific problems.
Provide clear plans for evaluation, dissemination, and sustainability of tools and methods.
Present metrics for impact and comparison to existing approaches.
Are there any restrictions I should know about?
Projects must be clearly focused on clinical informatics and not be incremental improvements of existing tools.
Projects primarily focused on social determinants of health or ethical/legal/social issues are considered non-responsive.
Applications with foreign subawards/subcontracts are noncompliant and will not be reviewed.
How long will it take me to prepare an application?
Preparation time depends on your readiness, but NIH typically recommends starting months before the nearest due date to:
Complete registrations (Grants.gov, eRA Commons, SAM/NCAGE, UEI).
Develop a rigorous research plan with evaluation and dissemination strategies.
Coordinate any institutional approvals.
Begin ASAP to ensure you meet the due date’s 5:00 PM local time deadline.
How can BW&CO help?
BW&CO can:
Translate scientific aims into NIH-aligned application narratives.
Help articulate innovation, significance, and approach clearly.
Build budget justification and milestone plans that meet NIH expectations.
Develop data management, dissemination, and impact strategies that strengthen score.
How much would BW&CO Charge?
We have both fractional engagements ($250 an hour) and full engagements for submitting application ($13,000) available.