Sarath Menon

2papers

2 Papers

20.4DBMar 31
Ontology-based knowledge graph infrastructure for interoperable atomistic simulation data

Abril Azocar Guzman, Sarath Menon, Tilmann Hickel et al.

The reuse of atomistic simulation data is often limited by heterogeneous formats, incomplete metadata, and a lack of standardized representations of workflows and provenance. Here we present an ontology-based infrastructure for representing and integrating atomistic simulation data as a knowledge graph. The approach combines domain ontologies with a software framework that enables data capture both from existing datasets and directly from simulation workflows at the point of generation. Heterogeneous data from multiple sources are normalized into a common, ontology-aligned representation, enabling consistent querying and analysis across datasets. We demonstrate these capabilities through the integration of grain boundary data, cross-dataset analysis of material properties, and extraction of derived thermodynamic quantities from existing simulations. In addition, workflows are represented in a machine-readable form, enabling both forward provenance tracking and partial reconstruction of computational procedures. The resulting knowledge graph contains over 750,000 triples describing nearly 8,000 computational samples. This work provides a practical framework for improving the findability, interoperability, and reuse of atomistic simulation data.

MTRL-SCIFeb 1
Towards knowledge-based workflows: a semantic approach to atomistic simulations for mechanical and thermodynamic properties

Abril Azocar Guzman, Hoang-Thien Luu, Sarath Menon et al.

Mechanical and thermodynamic properties, including the influence of crystal defects, are critical for evaluating materials in engineering applications. Molecular dynamics simulations provide valuable insight into these mechanisms at the atomic scale. However, current practice often relies on fragmented scripts with inconsistent metadata and limited provenance, which hinders reproducibility, interoperability, and reuse. FAIR data principles and workflow-based approaches offer a path to address these limitations. We present reusable atomistic workflows that incorporate metadata annotation aligned with application ontologies, enabling automatic provenance capture and FAIR-compliant data outputs. The workflows cover key mechanical and thermodynamic quantities, including equation of state, elastic tensors, mechanical loading, thermal properties, defect formation energies, and nanoindentation. We demonstrate validation of structure-property relations such as the Hall-Petch effect and show that the workflows can be reused across different interatomic potentials and materials within a coherent semantic framework. The approach provides AI-ready simulation data, supports emerging agentic AI workflows, and establishes a generalizable blueprint for knowledge-based mechanical and thermodynamic simulations.