Federal News
NSF Awards Wavelogix Concrete Sensing Grant
March 11, 2026
The National Science Foundation (NSF) has awarded Wavelogix, a Purdue University spinout based in West Lafayette, Indiana, a $500,000 SBIR Phase IIB grant to advance its Rebel concrete strength sensing system. This funding supports scaling and refining the technology to enable real-time monitoring of concrete strength, aiming to transform construction industry practices from reactive testing to proactive, data-driven decision-making. The grant follows a prior $1 million SBIR Phase II award in 2024, underscoring NSF's continued investment in this innovative infrastructure technology.
- Why this matters: Procurement professionals in construction and infrastructure sectors should note the growing emphasis on sensor-based, real-time monitoring technologies that improve project quality and efficiency.
- The grant signals potential future procurement opportunities for sensor manufacturers and technology integrators focused on infrastructure modernization.
- Contractors and vendors can leverage this development to align offerings with emerging data-driven construction standards and compliance requirements.
- Organizations involved in infrastructure projects may benefit from integrating such sensing systems to enhance quality assurance and reduce risks associated with concrete curing and strength validation.
This funding is a critical step toward transforming how the construction industry monitors and validates concrete performance, moving from reactive testing to proactive, real-time intelligence.
— Luna Lu, Wavelogix founder
This investment from the NSF enables us to focus on the engineering and manufacturing improvements that will make the Rebel system ready for widespread commercial deployment.
— Joe Turek, Wavelogix CEO
Agencies
National Science Foundation, Purdue University
Vendors
Wavelogix
Contracts
$500,000, $1,000,000
Locations
Sources
- Concrete sensor manufacturer Wavelogix receives $500K grant from National Science Foundation - News · Purdue University · Mar 11