DON26TZ01-NV014 TITLE: Low Power Seawater Converter for Aircrew Survival
OUSW (R&E) CRITICAL TECHNOLOGY AREA(S): Contested Logistics Technologies (LOG)
COMPONENT TECHNOLOGY PRIORITY AREA(S): Advanced Materials;Biotechnology;Sustainment
PROJECTED CMMC LEVEL REQUIREMENT: Level 2 (Self)
OBJECTIVE: Develop a lightweight, compact, rugged, and reliable device that can convert seawater into safe, drinkable water. The device should minimize bulk and human energy expenditure, while maximizing output.
DESCRIPTION: Survival in a life raft on the open ocean depends greatly on the availability of potable water. Naval aircrew currently carry prepackaged water in soft packets placed within the ejection seat survival kit and aircrew survival vest sufficient to sustain life for less than one day. Reverse osmosis desalinators and forward osmosis nutrient packs are commercially available to the recreational seafarer. However, neither of these approaches are designed to maximize the amount of drinkable water while minimizing the amount of human energy expended, while constrained by limited space within a survival kit. Manual Reverse Osmosis Desalinator (MROD) devices are labor intensive, requiring more than 2500 pumps to produce one liter of water in one hour. Such human powered devices may require more energy expenditure than the calories available to stranded aircrew. Forward osmosis products available for the recreational sailor can produce potable beverages with little manual effort, but the total output capacity for aircrew is limited by the storage volume of the ejection seat survival kit. Current options for supplying sufficient drinking water to sustain life throughout extended rescue durations are inadequate.
Innovative solutions will minimize or eliminate aircrew physical activity/exertion, while producing at least one gallon of drinkable water per day, with a minimum salt rejection of 95%. Concepts utilizing novel chemical processes or nanotechnology are preferred over simple refinements of current osmosis technology.
The device should:
a) fit within a Naval Aircraft Common Ejection Seat (NACES) survival kit (an envelope approximately 6½"x14½"x4½") along with an Emergency Oxygen System (EOS) and an LRU-38/P life raft, but not exceed 114 cubic inches.
b) operate in near freezing brine water/freshwater/saltwater.
c) operate in turbulent or calm water conditions.
d) operate reliably in cold and hot ambient air from -40° to +125°F (-40° to +51°C).
e) operate after exposure to temperature extremes from -65° to +160°F (-54° to +71°C).
f) operate after exposure to mold, mildew, flame, and salt fog.
g) not create hazards (i.e., burn, injury, Foreign Object Debris (FOD), snag/trip, and static discharge) inany mission or survival operations.
h) operate following a 600-knot seat ejection.
i) operate after repeated exposure to altitudes up to 70,000 ft (0.65 psi).
j) operate after exposure to typical fixed-wing ejection seat aircraft vibration levels, at frequencies from 5 Hz-2000 Hz).
k) provide resistance to environmental contaminants (i.e., sand, petroleum, oil, lubricants, and solar radiation).
l) not interfere with survival vest or mounted gear, armor/armor release, seat harnesses, helmets or head mounted gear.
m) be capable of operating after 15 months in a packed state (360-day inspection cycle plus 90 day shelf life) while exposed to temperature ranges of -65° to 160°F (-54° to +71°C).
n) weigh less than 2 lbs.
o) use Berry Amendment-compliant materials and manufacturing techniques.
PHASE I: Design and determine the feasibility of a concept seawater conversion device that meets the requirements provided in the Description. Demonstrate feasibility through analysis, modeling, simulation, and limited laboratory demonstrations. Provide performance, size, weight, cost and reliability estimates.
PHASE II: Develop, demonstrate, and validate a prototype seawater conversion device based on the design concept created in Phase I. Demonstrate device operation and capabilities in laboratory and simulated ocean environments. Provide draft design specifications, engineering drawings, and cost-benefit and life-cycle analyses.
PHASE III DUAL USE APPLICATIONS: Fabricate, validate, and deliver additional prototype devices for testing in open ocean environments. Provide support in transitioning the technology to Navy use. Provide a technical data package including a performance specification, an interface control document, and engineering drawings in accordance with military standards. Develop and assist with required qualification testing and training. Document the quality assurance test program in accordance with industry best practices.
The transfer and modification of commercial technology can benefit other military and recreational seafarers, as well as industrial, merchant, and marine operators and their crews or passengers.
REFERENCES:
KEYWORDS: survival; osmosis; desalinate; portable; seawater; life raft
TPOC 1
Geoffrey Ciarlone
geoffrey.e.ciarlone.mil@us.navy.milTPOC 2
Katrina Colucci-Chang
katrina.colucci-chang.civ@us.navy.mil
** TOPIC NOTICE ** |
The Navy Topic above is an "unofficial" copy from the Navy Topics in the DoW FY-26 Release 1 SBIR BAA. Please see the official DoW Topic website at www.dodsbirsttr.mil/submissions/solicitation-documents/active-solicitations for any updates. The DoW issued its Navy FY-26 Release 1 SBIR Topics pre-release on April 13, 2026 which opens to receive proposals on May 6, 2026, and closes June 3, 2026 (12:00pm ET). Direct Contact with Topic Authors: During the pre-release period (April 13, through May 5, 2026) proposing firms have an opportunity to directly contact the Technical Point of Contact (TPOC) to ask technical questions about the specific BAA topic. The TPOC contact information is listed in each topic description. Once DoW begins accepting proposals on May 6, 2026 no further direct contact between proposers and topic authors is allowed unless the Topic Author is responding to a question submitted during the Pre-release period. DoD On-line Q&A System: After the pre-release period, until May 20, 2026, at 12:00 PM ET, proposers may submit written questions through the DoW On-line Topic Q&A at https://www.dodsbirsttr.mil/submissions/login/ by logging in and following instructions. In the Topic Q&A system, the questioner and respondent remain anonymous but all questions and answers are posted for general viewing. DoW Topics Search Tool: Visit the DoW Topic Search Tool at www.dodsbirsttr.mil/topics-app/ to find topics by keyword across all DoW Components participating in this BAA.
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