Request for Information (RFI) on Biologically-Derived Materials for Transient Propulsion Systems
Office of the Director of National Intelligence · INTELLIGENCE ADVANCED RESEARCH PROJECTS ACTIVITY
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- Response deadline
- May 14, 2026, 8:00 PM EDT
- Posted
- Apr 19, 2026
- Solicitation
- IARPA-RFI-26-01
- Set-aside
- No Set aside used
- PSC
- GENERAL SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY R&D SERVICES; GENERAL SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY; APPLIED RESEARCHAJ12
- Place of performance
- Washington, DC, USA
- Contracting office
- INTELLIGENCE ADVANCED RESEARCH PROJECTS ACTIVITY
- Source
- SAM.gov · updated May 9, 2026
Description
The Intelligence Advanced Research Projects Activity (IARPA) seeks information regarding the current state of the art (SOTA) in biologically-derived materials suitable for controlled transience in propulsion systems for unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs). IARPA is interested in understanding how controlled material degradation can be extended beyond structural components to include turbines, engines, motors, and associated propulsion elements. Of particular interest are approaches that move beyond?ultraviolet (UV)-initiated?or?water (H2O)-initiated?transience mechanisms and subsequently enable?more diverse triggering modalities that are stable in a range of environmental conditions. This RFI is issued for planning purposes only and does not constitute a formal solicitation for proposals or suggest the procurement of any materials, components, or systems. The proliferation of UAV operations across military, intelligence, and civilian domains has raised growing concerns about the environmental footprint of aerospace materials, particularly in scenarios where systems may be lost. Conventional propulsion components, and their controls, fabricated from persistent materials�metal alloys, engineering plastics, and advanced composites�can remain in ecosystems for decades or centuries. DARPA's ICARUS (Inbound, Controlled, Air-Releasable, Unrecoverable Systems) program pioneered a solution for airframe structures by demonstrating transient materials that maintain operational performance before undergoing controlled degradation, thereby minimizing persistent environmental residue. The ICARUS approach employed primarily UV-triggered photopolymers that undergo programmable degradation of structural components, establishing proof-of-concept. However, extending these achievements beyond airframes to propulsion systems and their controls reveals critical limitations: propulsion components operate under extreme thermal, mechanical, and chemical stresses; contain a mixture of material types; must maintain structural integrity throughout dynamic mission profiles; require materials compatible with combustion environments or electromagnetic fields; and face significant challenges when UV initiation serves as the primary degradation trigger within enclosed or shielded propulsion assemblies where UV exposure may be limited or absent. Moreover, there may be operational parameters where natural UV exposure is present. Environmental conditions that naturally degrade materials�humidity, microbial activity, thermal cycling, oxidation�are often more readily available than UV exposure, suggesting opportunities for bio-derived materials that leverage natural decomposition pathways to control degradation of an airborne system. Responses to this RFI are due no later than?5:00 p.m. Eastern Time, May 15, 2026. All submissions must be electronically submitted as PDF documents to?dni-iarpa-rfi-26-01@iarpa.gov. Inquiries must be submitted to the same address. Do not send questions with proprietary content. No telephone inquiries will be accepted.
What similar awards have paid
Real federal awards already on the books in a similar lane — so you can size the opportunity, not guess. This is public history, not a bid price, cost estimate, or prediction that you will win.
Typical award size
$999,851
Middle of the pack for similar past awards
Most similar awards fall between $249,985 and $1.80M
Who has won work like this
Public awardees in this lane — useful for competitor scan or teaming ideas, not a ranked list of “best” firms.
- 1BATTELLE SAVANNAH RIVER ALLIANCE, LLC1 award$1.32B
- 2LINQUEST CORPORATION3 awards$65.59M
- 3BATTELLE MEMORIAL INSTITUTE12 awards$49.92M
- 4GENERAL ATOMICS2 awards$44.60M
- 5VANDERBILT UNIVERSITY MEDICAL CENTER2 awards$34.48M
- 6SCIENCE APPLICATIONS INTERNATIONAL CORPORATION1 award$33.41M
- 7MI TECHNICAL SOLUTIONS, INC.3 awards$30.81M
- 8THE KENIFIC GROUP LLC1 award$30.65M
Drawn from official USAspending contract records in our index. Always confirm requirements on the SAM.gov notice before you bid.
Intelligence only — not legal advice or a guarantee of award. Always verify requirements on the official SAM.gov notice. Past award amounts are public history, not a suggested bid or prediction. Notice ID ea2620641fc24f78aee63a91244c18cf.