GGrantIndex
← Leaderboards

University Of Houston System

Compare ↔
$183,028,285
Total funding
276
Grants

Funding over time

peak $20.6M · FY200825
$25M$18.8M$12.5M$6.3M$0
'08
'09
'10
'11
'12
'13
'14
'15
'16
'17
'18
'19
'20
'21
'22
'23
'24
'25

Funding mix

By agency

DOE$98,082,739 · 85
DOD$52,263,532 · 92
NASA$28,320,815 · 86
USDA$4,361,198 · 13

By mechanism

$183,028,285 · 276

Investigators at University Of Houston System

InvestigatorsiAttributed = a PI's even-split share of each grant — a $1M grant with 2 PIs counts $500K each.
Exposure= the full size of every grant they're on ($1M each).

Rising Stars

First grant in the last 5 yrs

Not enough data

Emerging Leaders

6–10 yrs in

Not enough data

All-Time

Most funded here, all years

Not enough data

Largest grants

SELECTED PROBLEMS IN RELATIVISTIC HEAVY ION PHYSIC IN ALICE AT THE LHC$9,927,000
· FY2009 · Department of Energy
CONVERGENT SCIENCE CANCER CONSORTIUM FOR IMMUNE CELL ENGINEERING$6,545,487
· FY2025 · Defense Health Agency
NATIONAL WIND ENERGY CENTER$6,378,381
· FY2010 · Department of Energy
TAS::89 0328::TAS RECOVERY-WORKFORCE TRAINING FOR THE ELECTRIC POWER SECTOR-UNIVERSITY OF HOUSTON. THIS AWARD WILL PROVIDE WORKFORCE DEVELOPMENT FOR$4,968,891
· FY2010 · Department of Energy
ADVANCED MANUFACTURING OF HIGH PERFORMANCE SUPERCONDUCTOR WIRES FOR NEXT GENERATION ELECTRIC MACHINES$4,500,000
· FY2017 · Department of Energy
URBAN CENTER FOR STUDENT SUCCESS IN SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY, ENGINEERING & MATHEMATICS$3,930,149
· FY2008 · Department of the Army
HIGH PERFORMANCE LOW COST SUPERCONDUCTING WIRES AND COILS FOR HIGH POWER WIND GENERATORS$3,785,316
· FY2012 · Department of Energy
UNIVERSITY OF HOUSTON, NEW COMPETITIVE AGREEMENT, UNDER FOA NUMBER DE-FOA-0002459 (OPEN 2021) WITH PROJECT TITLE ''LITHIUM- AND TRANSITION METAL-FREE HIGH-ENERGY FAST-CHARGING BATTERIES'' TO ENHANCE THE ENERGY SUPPLY CHAIN SECURITY OF THE U.S., UNIVERSITY OF HOUSTON HEREIN PROPOSE A BATTERY THAT WILL MATCH LITHIUM BATTERIES IN TERMS OF ENERGY AND POWER DENSITIES WITHOUT USING LITHIUM AND TRANSITION METALS IN ACTIVE MATERIALS. UH PROPOSED BATTERY WILL SUBSTITUTE LITHIUM-BASED ANODES WITH THE ENERGY-DENSE AND ABUNDANT MAGNESIUM, OF WHICH METAL THE U.S. HAS VIRTUALLY UNLIMITED RESERVE AND HAD BEEN THE WORLD’S DOMINANT PRODUCER. TRANSITION METAL-BASED CATHODES WILL BE REPLACED BY ORGANIC MATERIALS OBTAINED FROM OIL REFINERY AND BIOREFINERY, OF BOTH THE U.S. HAS THE LARGEST CAPACITY IN THE WORLD. THE PROPOSED “MAGNESIUM-ORGANIC” BATTERIES ARE THUS A GREENER AND RELIABLY DOMESTICALLY AVAILABLE ALTERNATIVE TO LITHIUM BATTERIES.$3,400,000
· FY2022 · Department of Energy
NEUTRINO OSCILLATION PHYSICS ON THE WAY TO DUNE$2,955,000
· FY2020 · Department of Energy
TAS::57 3600::TASSEARCH FOR AND STUDY OF NOVEL SUPERCONDUCTOR WITH HIGHER TC AND JC$2,800,000
· FY2009 · Department of Defense
HIGH-PERFORMANCE HIGH-FIELD SUPERCONDUCTING WIRES FOR NEXT GENERATION ACCELERATORS$2,790,000
· FY2017 · Department of Energy
PROMOTE COMMERCIALY FUNDED RESEARCH AND TECHNOLOGY DEVELOPMENT IN THE FIELD OF SPACE VACUUM EPITAXY$2,720,833
· FY2008 · National Aeronautics and Space Administration
PARTICLE PHYSICS RESEARCH AT THE UNIVERSITY OF HOUSTON$2,700,000
· FY2014 · Department of Energy
CASK MIS-LOADS EVALUATION TECHNIQUES.$2,698,763
· FY2017 · Department of Energy
MANPOWER AND PERSONNEL ASSESSMENT BATTERY$2,259,417
· FY2021 · Department of the Navy
TAILORING ZEOLITE CATALYSTS FOR THE CONVERSION OF METHANOL TO HYDROCARBONS$2,099,961
· FY2015 · Department of Energy
RESILIENT AMMOXIDATION OF SMALL HYDROCARBONS (R-ASH) USING FORCED DYNAMIC OPERATION FOR MAXIMAL FLEXIBILITY$2,091,874
· FY2021 · Department of Energy
NEW; ENHANCED MIXED ELECTRONIC-IONIC CONDUCTORS THROUGH CATION ORDERING; PI - ALLAN J. JACOBSON$2,000,002
· FY2009 · Department of Energy
FIRE COLLABORATIVE: NEUTRON-IRRADIATION-TOLERANT REBCO TAPES FOR COMPACT FUSION$1,979,946
· FY2025 · Department of Energy
AWARD NUMBER DE-EE0008322, TITLED ''DESIGN AND OPTIMIZATION OF STRUCTURED MULTI-FUNCTIONAL TRAPPING CATALYSTS FOR CONVERSION OF HYDROCARBONS AND NOX FROM DIESEL AND ADVANCED COMBUSTION ENGINES''$1,799,998
· FY2017 · Department of Energy