Active Solicitation · DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY

    TECHNOLOGY LICENSING OPPORTUNITY: BROADQ

    DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
    Sol. S-194218Special NoticeColumbus, OH
    Open · 24d remaining
    DAYS TO CLOSE
    24
    closes Jun 6, 2026
    POSTED
    May 6, 2026
    Publication date
    NAICS CODE
    334516
    Primary industry classification
    PSC CODE
    6650
    Product & service classification

    AI Summary

    The Department of Energy is offering a technology licensing opportunity for the BroadQ Entangled Photon Quantum FTIR, a novel platform for infrared spectroscopy and microscopy. This technology enables broadband infrared coverage without cryogenic cooling and supports both near-field and far-field imaging. It is suitable for various applications, including analytical instrumentation and life sciences. Interested parties can contact Los Alamos National Laboratory for licensing discussions.

    Contract details

    Solicitation No.
    S-194218
    Notice Type
    Special Notice
    Posted Date
    May 6, 2026
    Response Deadline
    June 6, 2026
    NAICS Code
    334516AI guide
    PSC / Class Code
    6650
    Primary Contact
    Kathleen McDonald
    State
    OH
    ZIP Code
    43201
    AI Product/Service
    product

    Description

    Entangled Photon Quantum FTIR

    BroadQ introduces a new way to gather infrared information by using entangled photons without the need of conventional thermal detectors. Developed by scientists at Los Alamos National Laboratory, the platform combines broadband entangled photon generation with a dual-mode imaging layout, creating a path toward compact infrared spectroscopy and microscopy that can operate at very low light levels, avoid cryogenic cooling and support both near-field and far-field measurements from one setup. That combination makes BroadQ attractive for sensitive samples, portable field instruments and advanced imaging workflows where conventional FTIR systems face practical limits.

    How it Works

    BroadQ Entangled Photon Quantum FTIR scans a pump beam across entangled photon sources containing spatially varying regions that produce entanglement across different spectral bands, then uses descan optics to combine the output into a stationary broadband beam. Reflective parabolic optics and scan/descan mirror pairs help preserve image quality while avoiding chromatic dispersion, which would otherwise weaken performance across such a wide spectral range. The resulting entangled photons can be the input for an imaging system that supports either near-field or far-field operation without rebuilding or reconfiguring the instrument, which gives the platform flexibility for different spectroscopy and microscopy needs.

    Technical Description

    The core innovation is a source of broadband entangled photons. Rather than relying on a single narrowband entangled source, the BroadQ Entangled Photon Quantum FTIR platform scans across structured regions in a source and merges the emitted output into one beam, extending spectral coverage across the near- to mid-infrared range. The approach is source-agnostic, so it can work with nonlinear crystals, meta-surfaces or liquid crystals.

    A second layer of BroadQ is the imaging architecture. The optical layout places the source at an imaging plane and then relay images or collimates the beam so the same setup can support both near-field and far-field imaging. That matters because near-field imaging can resolve smaller features than far-field methods, while far-field arrangements remain useful for readout of larger fields of view. The disclosed system is intended to make quantum FTIR and related quantum imaging workflows more practical by pairing broadband entangled light with an instrument layout that is easier to use and more adaptable than current approaches.

    Advantages

    • Broadband infrared coverage from a single platform
    • No need for cryogenic MCT detectors
    • Supports both near-field and far-field imaging without reconfiguration
    • Works at very low light levels, reducing sample damage risk
    • Compatible with multiple entangled photon source types
    • More portable and integration-friendly than conventional FTIR setups

    Market Applications

    • Analytical Instrumentation (FTIR microscopes, spectroscopy systems)
    • Life Sciences (light-sensitive biological samples, cellular imaging, plant imaging)
    • Chemical Sensing (material identification, spectral analysis)
    • Defense and Security (trace detection, threat reconnaissance)
    • Semiconductor and Materials Characterization (thin films, advanced materials)
    • Remote Sensing (field-deployable infrared analysis)

    TRL 3

    US Patent pending

    LA-UR-26-23629

    LANL Tech Partnerships: Unlock the Innovative Potential

    Los Alamos National Laboratory offers a wide range of cutting-edge technologies and capabilities that may provide your company with a competitive edge in the market and unlock the innovative potential that can enhance, refine, and revolutionize your products.

    LANL’s licensing program focuses on moving inventions developed by our researchers to commercial innovations. Patented and patent pending inventions and copyrighted software are available to existing and start-up companies through exclusive and non-exclusive licensing agreements. For specific discussions, please contact licensing@lanl.gov.

    Note: This is not a call for external services for the development of this technology.

    https://www.lanl.gov/engage/collaboration/feynman-center/partner-with-us/licensing-technology

    m.lanl.gov/tech-search

    Key dates

    1. May 6, 2026Posted Date
    2. June 6, 2026Proposals / Responses Due

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    Frequently asked questions

    TECHNOLOGY LICENSING OPPORTUNITY: BROADQ is a federal acquisition solicitation issued by DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY. Review the full description, attachments, and submission requirements on SamSearch before the response deadline.

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