Documentation for pynxtools-apm¶
pynxtools-apm is a free and open-source data software for creating standardized semantic serializations of atom probe tomography and related field-ion microscopy data and metadata for research data management using NeXus, implemented with the goal to make scientific research data FAIR (findable, accessible, interoperable, and reusable).
pynxtools-apm, which is a plugin for pynxtools, provides a tool for reading data and metadata from various proprietary and open data formats from technology partners of the
atom probe community and standardizing it such that it is compliant with the NeXus application definition NXapm
.
pynxtools-apm is developed both as a standalone reader and as a tool within NOMAD, which is the open-source research data management platform for materials science we are developing with FAIRmat.
pynxtools-apm solves the challenge of using heterogeneous and semantically ambiguous serialization formats which is common in atom probe research. In addition, it provides an interface for writing readers for different file formats to be mapped to NeXus.
pynxtools-apm is useful for scientists from the atom probe community, for technology partners, software developers, and data providers who search for ways to make their data and metadata more completely aligned with the aims of the FAIR principles. Specifically the tool is useful for research groups who wish to organize their research data based on an interoperable standard.
Tutorial¶
How-to guides¶
Reference¶
Here you can learn which specific pieces of information and concepts the plugin supports for the respective file formats of the atom probe tomography and field-ion microscopy communities.
- How to map pieces of information to NeXus
- APT file format
- ePOS file format
- POS file format
- RNG file format
- RRNG file format
- Matlab Atom Probe Toolbox ranging definitions
- OXCART instrument and pyccapt
- ATO file format
- ENV file format
- CSV file format
- Inspico file formats
- AMETEK/Cameca ROOT-based formats
- Automated charge state analysis
- Automated extraction of elements
Project and community
Any questions or suggestions? Get in touch!