| name | Composition AI Research |
| description | Research product compositions using AI and web sources. Use when needing to find what products, substances, or objects are made of - including ingredients, materials, chemicals, and elements. Essential for building composition data. |
Composition AI Research Skill
Purpose
This skill enables thorough research into what things are made of. Use it to gather accurate composition data for any product, substance, organism, or object.
When to Use
- User asks to research a composition
- Building the composition database
- Verifying or updating existing composition data
- Finding sources for composition claims
Research Process
Step 1: Identify the Subject
Clarify exactly what we're researching:
- Product name, brand, variant (e.g., "Kellogg's Frosted Flakes 13.5oz box")
- Category (food, electronics, biological, chemical, etc.)
- Any specific version or configuration
Step 2: Source Priority
Research in this order:
Official Sources (highest confidence)
- Manufacturer websites
- FDA ingredient databases
- Safety Data Sheets (SDS/MSDS)
- Nutrition labels
- Patent filings
Scientific Sources
- PubChem for chemical data
- Scientific papers
- MaterialsProject for materials
- Industry technical specs
Analysis Sources
- iFixit teardowns (electronics)
- Independent lab testing
- Engineering analysis sites
- Consumer reports
Secondary Sources (verify independently)
- Wikipedia (check sources)
- News articles
- Industry reports
Step 3: Data Structure
Organize findings hierarchically:
Level 1: Product (iPhone 15 Pro)
└── Level 2: Component (Battery)
└── Level 3: Material (Lithium-ion cell)
└── Level 4: Chemical (Lithium cobalt oxide)
└── Level 5: Element (Li, Co, O)
Step 4: Confidence Assessment
For each data point:
- Verified: Direct from official source with citation
- Estimated: Based on similar products or industry standards
- Speculative: Reasonable inference when data unavailable
Output Format
Return research as structured JSON:
{
"subject": {
"name": "Product Name",
"category": "Category",
"variant": "Specific variant if applicable"
},
"composition": [
{
"name": "Component Name",
"percentage": 45.2,
"confidence": "verified",
"source": "https://source-url.com",
"type": "component",
"children": []
}
],
"sources": [
{
"url": "https://...",
"title": "Source Title",
"type": "official|scientific|analysis|secondary",
"accessed": "2024-01-15"
}
],
"notes": "Any caveats or limitations"
}
Common Research Patterns
Food Products
- Start with nutrition facts label
- FDA Food Composition Database
- Research each ingredient's chemical makeup
- Track to molecular/elemental level
Electronics
- Search for teardown reports
- Check manufacturer sustainability reports
- Research battery chemistry specifically
- Patents often reveal proprietary details
Chemicals
- PubChem for molecular structure
- SDS for composition percentages
- ChemSpider for additional data
- Scientific literature for variations
Biological
- Scientific databases (UniProt, NCBI)
- Peer-reviewed papers
- Consider hydrated vs dry weight
- Note species-specific variations
Quality Guidelines
- Always cite sources - Every percentage needs a source
- Use ranges when uncertain - "40-50%" better than guessing "45%"
- Note proprietary limitations - Some data is trade secret
- Cross-reference multiple sources - Don't rely on single source
- Date your research - Compositions can change over time