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  4. A Modular Solution Concept for Self-Configurable Electronic Lab Notebooks: Systematic Theoretical Demonstration and Validation Across Diverse Digital Platforms
 
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2026
Journal Article
Title

A Modular Solution Concept for Self-Configurable Electronic Lab Notebooks: Systematic Theoretical Demonstration and Validation Across Diverse Digital Platforms

Abstract
The increasing complexity and digitization of scientific research require Electronic Laboratory Notebooks (ELNs) that are adaptable, sustainable, and compliant across heterogeneous laboratory environments. In response to the limitations of proprietary, inflexible, and cost-intensive ELN solutions, this study systematically derives comprehensive requirements and proposes a modular solution concept for self-configurable ELNs that is explicitly platform-agnostic and broadly accessible. The methodological approach combines a structured requirements analysis with a modular architectural design, followed by theoretical validation through stepwise implementation walkthroughs on Microsoft SharePoint and Google Workspace. These walkthroughs demonstrate the feasibility of deploying self-configurable ELN modules using widely available low-code/no-code tools and native platform extensibility mechanisms. Based on a rigorous literature-driven analysis, key requirements, including modularity, usability, regulatory compliance, interoperability, scalability, auditability, and cost efficiency, are explicitly mapped to concrete architectural features within the proposed framework. The results show that essential ELN functionalities can, in principle, be realized across diverse digital platforms, enabling researchers and local administrators to independently assemble, configure, and adapt ELNs to their specific operational and regulatory contexts. Beyond technical feasibility, the proposed approach fundamentally democratizes ELN deployment and substantially mitigates vendor lock-in by leveraging existing digital infrastructures. Identified limitations, particularly with respect to advanced workflow orchestration and real-time data integration, delineate clear directions for future development. Overall, this work provides a systematic theoretical validation of a modular, self-configurable ELN concept, establishing it as a robust, scalable, and future-ready foundation for digital laboratory infrastructures.
Author(s)
Feldhoff, Kim
Technische Universität Dresden
Zinner, Martin
Technische Universität Dresden
Wiemer, Hajo
Technische Universität Dresden
Ihlenfeldt, Steffen  
Fraunhofer-Institut für Werkzeugmaschinen und Umformtechnik IWU  
Journal
Applied Sciences  
Open Access
File(s)
Download (647.4 KB)
Rights
CC BY 4.0: Creative Commons Attribution
DOI
10.3390/app16010462
10.24406/publica-7269
Additional link
Full text
Language
English
Fraunhofer-Institut für Werkzeugmaschinen und Umformtechnik IWU  
Keyword(s)
  • digital platform

  • electronic lab notebook

  • interoperability

  • low-code

  • modular architecture

  • platform-agnostic solution

  • regulatory compliance

  • research data management

  • self-configuration

  • workflow automation

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