Active Solicitation · DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY

    TECHNOLOGY LICENSING OPPORTUNITY: GLASS COMPONENTS FABRICATED VIA AEROSOL JET PRINTING

    DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
    Sol. S-166756Special NoticeColumbus, OH
    Open · 48d remaining
    DAYS TO CLOSE
    48
    closes Jun 30, 2026
    POSTED
    Apr 30, 2026
    Publication date
    NAICS CODE
    541713
    Primary industry classification
    PSC CODE
    AJ12
    Product & service classification

    AI Summary

    The Department of Energy is offering a technology licensing opportunity for an innovative additive manufacturing method that fabricates micron-scale glass components using aerosol jet printing. This technology allows for the production of complex geometries and high-precision glass features, reducing reliance on traditional subtractive machining methods. Interested parties can explore licensing options to leverage this cutting-edge technology for various optical and photonic applications.

    Contract details

    Solicitation No.
    S-166756
    Notice Type
    Special Notice
    Posted Date
    April 30, 2026
    Response Deadline
    June 30, 2026
    NAICS Code
    541713AI guide
    PSC / Class Code
    AJ12
    Primary Contact
    Satya Srinivasan
    State
    OH
    ZIP Code
    43201
    AI Product/Service
    both

    Description

    An additive manufacturing method for micron-scale glass component fabrication

    Micron-scale glass components are widely used in optical, photonic, and micro-fabricated systems. These components are commonly produced through grinding, polishing, and milling processes that require tight tolerances and specialized equipment. As device architectures become more compact and geometrically complex, these approaches can constrain design flexibility and integration.

    Los Alamos researchers developed an additive manufacturing process that builds glass components layer by layer using aerosol jet printing. Glass particles suspended in an aerosolizable carrier solution are deposited onto a substrate and then sintered to form monolithic glass structures. This approach enables controlled fabrication of small glass features without bulk glass melting or post-fabrication machining.

    Value Proposition

    This technology enables the fabrication of micron-scale glass components using an additive manufacturing approach. Conventional fabrication methods rely on subtractive machining, which can limit achievable geometries and increase processing complexity at small scales. By depositing glass material directly into its final geometry and sintering it into a dense structure, this method provides an alternative pathway for producing small, high-precision glass features.

    Advantages

    • Enables additive fabrication of micron-scale glass components
    • Reduces reliance on precision subtractive glass machining
    • Supports complex geometries and embedded glass features
    • Compatible with multiple glass compositions and substrates
    • Integrates with existing aerosol jet printing platforms

    Technology Description

    The method uses aerosol jet printing to deposit fine glass particles or sol-gel-based materials with micron-scale resolution. Deposition conditions are adjusted to build glass features to a specified thickness and geometry. After deposition, the printed material is sintered to remove the carrier and bond the particles into a dense glass component.

    Demonstrations show that the process can produce continuous, monolithic glass features on planar substrates. The method supports multiple glass compositions and allows components to be fabricated directly in their final configuration.

    Market Applications

    This additive glass fabrication method is relevant to technologies that require small, high-precision glass components, including:

    • micro-optics and micron-scale lenses
    • optical waveguides and photonic interconnects
    • optical filters and coatings
    • glass-to-metal seals and microfluidic structures
    • photonic and optical packaging platforms

    These and related applications benefit from increased flexibility in the fabrication of glass features at small scales.

    TRL 3

    US Patent pending

    LA-UR-25-28977

    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. April 30, 2026Posted Date
    2. June 30, 2026Proposals / Responses Due

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    Frequently asked questions

    TECHNOLOGY LICENSING OPPORTUNITY: GLASS COMPONENTS FABRICATED VIA AEROSOL JET PRINTING 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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