Quick Guide To Computational Data#
THIS IS STILL BEING WORKED ON
THIS IS COPIED FROM SPREADHEETS MULTIPLE
Spreadsheet Structure#
The example consists of:
A worksheet named “Annealing”
Two sample identifiers (S1 and S2)
Four distinct attributes, including a file attribute
A worksheet named “SEM”
A single sample identified by S1
Three distinct attributes, including a file attribute
The Sample S1 goes through two workflow steps: Annealing, then SEM
Attribute Types#
The spreadsheet includes three different attributes that demonstrate various attribute types:
Sample Attribute#
s:hardness
Prefixed with
s:
to indicate a sample-specific attributeDirectly associated with sample S1
Used for material properties
s:grain size(microns)
Prefixed with
s:
to indicate a sample-specific attributeDirectly associated with sample S2
Used for material properties
Process Attributes#
p:time(h)
Prefixed with
p:
to indicate a process attributeMeasures annealing duration
Unit: Hours (h)
Associated with the annealing workflow
temperature(c)
Defaults to process attribute (no prefix required)
Measures annealing temperature
Unit: Celsius (c)
Associated with the annealing workflow
p:magnification
Prefixed with
p:
to indicate a process attributeMeasures annealing duration
No units
Associated with the SEM workflow
File Attributes#
f:images
Prefixed with
f:
to indicate a file attributeimages
inf:images
is an optional category that means something to the researcherCan have more than one
f:
attribute in a worksheetMust specify the full path in the project in Materials Commons (Not path on your laptop)
Note
Attributes without explicit prefixes (s:
or p:
) are automatically
treated as process attributes.
Note
There are no fixed unit designations. Use what makes sense to you. Consider documenting your units.
Note
You can have as many sample, process and file attributes as you like. You aren’t limited to one or a couple.
Prefix Convention#
Prefix |
Usage |
Example |
---|---|---|
|
Sample/computation attributes |
s:hardness |
|
Process/workflow attributes |
p:time(h) |
|
Files |
f:image |
none |
Default process attributes |
temperature(c) |
Tip
When creating new attributes, consider whether they describe the sample itself (use s:
)
or the process being performed (use p:
or no prefix).
The Annealing worksheet looks as follows:
Sample Name |
s:hardness |
p:time(m) |
temperature(c) |
f:images |
---|---|---|---|---|
S1 |
4 |
100 |
300 |
/Study1/C38/1C09/images/*.tif |
S2 |
200 |
350 |
The SEM worksheet looks as follows:
Sample Name |
s:grain size(microns) |
p:magnification |
f:images |
---|---|---|---|
S1 |
3 |
5 |
/Study1/C38/1C10/images/*.tiff |