Opportunity

SAM #S-129409

Technology Licensing Opportunity for Acoustic Camera from Los Alamos National Laboratory

Buyer

DOE Senior Network Security Contractor

Posted

May 27, 2026

Respond By

June 30, 2026

Identifier

S-129409

NAICS

334511, 541715, 541330, 541690

This opportunity is a technology licensing offer from Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL), operated by Triad National Security, LLC under the Department of Energy (DOE). - Licensing is for the Acoustic Camera, a patented LANL invention (US Patent No. 10,054,676-B2) - The Acoustic Camera uses high-frequency ultrasonic pulses and advanced signal processing to create 3D images in optically opaque fluids - Provides sub-millimeter depth resolution - Technology Readiness Level 4 - No specific OEMs or commercial vendors are listed; the technology is government-owned - Licensing is open to both established and start-up companies - Options for exclusive or non-exclusive agreements - This is not a solicitation for external development or services, but for commercial licensing - Place of performance is Los Alamos National Laboratory, Los Alamos, NM - Contracting office is Triad National Security, LLC, Columbus, OH

Description

When water turns murky or dense with mud, sediment or chemistry, optical cameras stop being useful, and operators are left guessing about what lies on the other side of the fluid. The Acoustic Camera from Los Alamos National Laboratory replaces that guesswork with sharp 3D imagery generated from sound, achieving sub-millimeter depth resolution in near real time. Instead of inferring the size and orientation of a submerged object from an impression block or a low-frequency sonar return, an operator receives an actual shape, with depth cues and material hints, on the first pass. The result is faster decisions in environments that have historically been opaque, whether the goal is recovering a lost tool from a wellbore, checking the integrity of a net pen in a turbid fjord, or inspecting submerged infrastructure where flushing or cleaning the surrounding fluid is not an option.

How it Works:

The system operates by transmitting high-frequency ultrasonic pulses—typically in the hundreds of kilohertz range (approximately 100–800 kHz)—into the wellbore toward an object of interest. These sound waves reflect off the object and are captured by a two-dimensional acoustic receiver array. By measuring the time-of-flight and spatial distribution of the returned echoes, onboard digital signal processing reconstructs a detailed 3D image of the object in near real time. Because ultrasound propagates through drilling mud and other optically opaque fluids, the system can generate clear 3D images without requiring fluid replacement or well cleanout.

Technical Description:

Acoustic Camera uses a broadband piezoelectric transducer to insonify the object with frequencies between roughly 100 kHz and 800 kHz. Because attenuation in fluids scales with the square of frequency, this band is chosen as the practical compromise between mud penetration (favoring lower frequencies) and image resolution (favoring higher frequencies). Reflected pulses pass through a compound high-density polyethylene (HDPE) acoustic lens consisting of a fixed plano-concave primary element and a motor-positioned secondary element, allowing focus adjustment without changing the receiver position, and yielding an appropriate magnification factor.

The receive array is a 2D segmented piezoelectric detector submerged in sound-communicating fluid whose low sound speed provides a roughly three-fold reduction in wavelength versus water and enables a compact camera housing. Image reconstruction can use either tone-burst excitation with first-arrival extraction or, for higher resolution, frequency-chirp excitation followed by cross-correlation of the transmit and receive signals — yielding depth resolution below 1 mm at working distances of up to approximately 2 feet in drilling mud. The film allows the source and detector to share a single optical axis, eliminating the multiple reflections and aberrations introduced by semi-transparent acoustic mirrors used in earlier architectures.

Key Advantages:

Imaging through opaque fluids: Enables 3D visualization in drilling mud and other optically opaque, acoustically attenuating fluids where optical systems fail Reduced cost and downtime: Eliminates the need for well cleanout and accelerates diagnostic decision-making during fishing operations Higher-quality diagnostics: Provides accurate 3D information on object shape and orientation, surpassing mechanical impression methods Lower operational risk: Improves fishing-tool selection and reduces the likelihood of failed recovery attempts or well loss Extensible platform: Applicable to other downhole and industrial environments involving optically opaque fluids, supporting future product expansion

Market Applications:

Oil & Gas Mining and Geotechnical Operations Enhanced Geothermal Systems Industrial Inspection and Maintenance Energy and Utilities Infrastructure Government and Defense

Development Status: TRL 4

US Patent No. 10,054,676-B2

LA-UR-26-24351

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

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