Advancing Catalysis Research through FAIR Data Principles Implemented in a Local Data Infrastructure - A Case Study of an Automated Test Reactor

10 June 2024, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Findable, Accessible, Interoperable, and Reusable (FAIR) data is currently emerging as an indispensable element in the advancement of science and requires the development of new methods for data acquisition, storage and sharing. This is becoming even more critical as the increasing application of artificial intelligence demands significantly higher data quality in terms of reliability, reproducibility and consistency of datasets. This paper presents methods for the digital and automatic acquisition and storage of data and metadata in catalysis experiments based on open-source software solutions. The successful implementation of a digitalization concept, which includes working according to machine-readable standardized operating procedures (SOPs) is outlined using a reactor for catalytic tests that has been automated with the open-source software tool EPICS (Experimental Physics and Industrial Control System). The process of data acquisition, standardized analysis, upload to a database and generation of relationships between database entries is fully automated. Application programming interfaces (APIs) have been developed to enable data exchange within the local data infrastructure and beyond to overarching repositories, paving the way for autonomous catalyst discovery and machine learning applications.

Supplementary materials

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Title
Supporting Information for Advancing Catalysis Research through FAIR Data Principles Implemented in a Local Data Infrastructure - A Case Study of an Automated Test Reactor
Description
Technical details on the reactor design, the catalyst and the programming tools
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