Materials Databases towards World Materials Database leading to Data-Intensive Materials Discovery through Data Exploration
Present Situation It is a fact that materials development/discovery is and will remain a key-point in our modern society. Chemists, physicists, materials scientists, and engineers have/are/will accumulated/ing/e gigantic amounts of materials data, but still in electronically not easily retrievable format During the last 30 years several colleagues and I, as editor or editor-in-chief, have been heavily involved in the creation of the following in its fields world-largest1 materials databases. We list them below: - Pauling File (LPF) Binaries Edition (about lOOOOO data-sets, CD-ROM) 1 - NIMS online version of the Pauling File (about 200000 data-sets) 2 - Pearsons Crystal Data, a crystal structure database for inorganic compounds, metals and alloys (about 200000 data-sets on CD-ROM) 3 - ASMs Alloy Phase Diagram Center, an online phase diagram compilation (about 34000 phase binary and ternary diagrams) 4 - Atomic coordinates to ICDDs phase-identification file PDF-4+ (about 140000 data-sets on CD-ROM) 5 - Landolt-Bdrnstein, Series III, volume 43, sub-volumes A1-A10, Crystal Structures of Inorganic Compounds, Springer, Heidelberg, Germany (about 10000 prototypes) 6 - Springer Materials Online containing under the same platform Landolt-Bdrnstein Series III (equal to about 130 sub-volumes at 500 pages) and LPF Multinaries Edition containing about 400000 data-sets 7.
P.Villare S.Iwata
Material Phases Data System (MPDS), CH-6354 Vrtznau, Switzerland The University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan
国际会议
The 2nd Asian Materials Database Symposium(第二届亚洲材料数据库会议 AMDS 2010)
三亚
英文
30-34
2010-03-10(万方平台首次上网日期,不代表论文的发表时间)