TY - CONF
T1 - Experiment Design with Confidence: CoMET
AU - Heidrich, Brenden J.
AU - Holden, Kaecee
AU - Argyle, Jordan
AU - Hurley, Shannon
AU - Verner, Kelley
PY - 2018/10/14
Y1 - 2018/10/14
N2 - The Nuclear Science User Facilities (NSUF) has been facilitating nuclear materials research since 2007 by providing access to national laboratory and other partner capabilities at no cost to the researchers. With funding from the Department of Energy – Office of Nuclear Energy, approximately 400 projects have been awarded to support research into radiation effects on fuels and materials. During these ten years, the NSUF has created tools to help researchers write better proposals and perform better research projects. In 2018, several of those tools have been combined to create a single point of access to NSUF information management resources. The Combined Materials Experiment Toolkit or CoMET, combines the Nuclear Energy Infrastructure Database (NEID), the Nuclear Fuels and Materials Library (NFML), and the NSUF proposal system, with a new subject matter expert database and an experiment design tool. The NEID contains information on 500 nuclear R&D facilities around the world, including 85 NSUF partner facilities. The NFML has information on nearly 10,000 material specimens, mostly irradiated materials, which can be used for research in NSUF projects. The new SME database includes contact information for NSUF researchers and scientists. The experiment design tool is an expert system that can guide a researcher through the process of designing an NSUF project by interacting with the other resources. Once a researcher has worked through this process, they will be able to save their experiment plan and input it into the NSUF proposal system. These tools are intended to aid both new and veteran researchers build solid research projects and take full advantage of NSUF resources. They also help the NSUF administer the hundreds of proposals that it receives each year. In the future, NSUF plans to add integrated data storage and retrieval to CoMET.
AB - The Nuclear Science User Facilities (NSUF) has been facilitating nuclear materials research since 2007 by providing access to national laboratory and other partner capabilities at no cost to the researchers. With funding from the Department of Energy – Office of Nuclear Energy, approximately 400 projects have been awarded to support research into radiation effects on fuels and materials. During these ten years, the NSUF has created tools to help researchers write better proposals and perform better research projects. In 2018, several of those tools have been combined to create a single point of access to NSUF information management resources. The Combined Materials Experiment Toolkit or CoMET, combines the Nuclear Energy Infrastructure Database (NEID), the Nuclear Fuels and Materials Library (NFML), and the NSUF proposal system, with a new subject matter expert database and an experiment design tool. The NEID contains information on 500 nuclear R&D facilities around the world, including 85 NSUF partner facilities. The NFML has information on nearly 10,000 material specimens, mostly irradiated materials, which can be used for research in NSUF projects. The new SME database includes contact information for NSUF researchers and scientists. The experiment design tool is an expert system that can guide a researcher through the process of designing an NSUF project by interacting with the other resources. Once a researcher has worked through this process, they will be able to save their experiment plan and input it into the NSUF proposal system. These tools are intended to aid both new and veteran researchers build solid research projects and take full advantage of NSUF resources. They also help the NSUF administer the hundreds of proposals that it receives each year. In the future, NSUF plans to add integrated data storage and retrieval to CoMET.
M3 - Presentation
ER -