Issue 4, 2023

The materials experiment knowledge graph

Abstract

Materials knowledge is inherently hierarchical. While high-level descriptors such as composition and structure are valuable for contextualizing materials data, the data must ultimately be considered in the context of its low-level acquisition details. Graph databases offer an opportunity to represent hierarchical relationships among data, organizing semantic relationships into a knowledge graph. Herein, we establish a knowledge graph of materials experiments whose construction encodes the complete provenance of each material sample and its associated experimental data and metadata. Additional relationships among materials and experiments further encode knowledge and facilitate data exploration. We illustrate the Materials Experiment Knowledge Graph (MekG) using several use cases, demonstrating the value of modern graph databases for the enterprise of data-driven materials science.

Graphical abstract: The materials experiment knowledge graph

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Communication
Submitted
13 Apr 2023
Accepted
24 Jun 2023
First published
28 Jun 2023
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

Digital Discovery, 2023,2, 909-914

The materials experiment knowledge graph

M. J. Statt, B. A. Rohr, D. Guevarra, J. Breeden, S. K. Suram and J. M. Gregoire, Digital Discovery, 2023, 2, 909 DOI: 10.1039/D3DD00067B

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