Abstract
The development of strong-scaling computational tools for high-throughput methods with an open-source code and transparent metadata standards has successfully transformed many computational materials science communities. While such tools are mature already in the condensed-matter physics community, the situation is still very different for many experimentalists. Atom probe tomography (APT) is one example. This microscopy and microanalysis technique has matured into a versatile nano-analytical characterization tool with applications that range from materials science to geology and possibly beyond. Here, data science tools are required for extracting chemo-structural spatial correlations from the reconstructed point cloud. For APT and other high-end analysis techniques, post-processing is mostly executed with proprietary software tools, which are opaque in their execution and have often limited performance. Software development by members of the scientific community has improved the situation but compared to the sophistication in the field of computational materials science several gaps remain. This is particularly the case for open-source tools that support scientific computing hardware, tools which enable high-throughput workflows, and open well-documented metadata standards to align experimental research better with the fair data stewardship principles. To this end, we introduce paraprobe, an open-source tool for scientific computing and high-throughput studying of point cloud data, here exemplified with APT. We show how to quantify uncertainties while applying several computational geometry, spatial statistics, and clustering tasks for post-processing APT datasets as large as two billion ions. These tools work well in concert with Python and HDF5 to enable several orders of magnitude performance gain, automation, and reproducibility.
Highlights
Precise and accurate quantification of uncertainties and the significance of scientific results is essential for every study in computational and experimental materials science
Delivering significant and substantiated quantitative descriptors for answering materials science questions is the role of microscopy and microanalysis techniques like Atom probe tomography (APT)
We show the benefit of these tools in typical microstructure characterization studies within alloy design
Summary
Precise and accurate quantification of uncertainties and the significance of scientific results is essential for every study in computational and experimental materials science. I.e., methods and tools from scientific computing, is another solution to improve the efficiency of APT data post-processing. Step towards open boxes of scientific computing tools for highthroughput processing of point cloud data, here exemplified for APT.
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