QMLMaterial─A Quantum Machine Learning Software for Material Design and Discovery

J Chem Theory Comput. 2023 Sep 12;19(17):5999-6010. doi: 10.1021/acs.jctc.3c00566. Epub 2023 Aug 15.

Abstract

Structural elucidation of chemical compounds is challenging experimentally, and theoretical chemistry methods have added important insight into molecules, nanoparticles, alloys, and materials geometries and properties. However, finding the optimum structures is a bottleneck due to the huge search space, and global search algorithms have been used successfully for this purpose. In this work, we present the quantum machine learning software/agent for materials design and discovery (QMLMaterial), intended for automatic structural determination in silico for several chemical systems: atomic clusters, atomic clusters and the spin multiplicity together, doping in clusters or solids, vacancies in clusters or solids, adsorption of molecules or adsorbents on surfaces, and finally atomic clusters on solid surfaces/materials or encapsulated in porous materials. QMLMaterial is an artificial intelligence (AI) software based on the active learning method, which uses machine learning regression algorithms and their uncertainties for decision making on the next unexplored structures to be computed, increasing the probability of finding the global minimum with few calculations as more data is obtained. The software has different acquisition functions for decision making (e.g., expected improvement and lower confidence bound). Also, the Gaussian process is available in the AI framework for regression, where the uncertainty is obtained analytically from Bayesian statistics. For the artificial neural network and support vector regressor algorithms, the uncertainty can be obtained by K-fold cross-validation or nonparametric bootstrap resampling methods. The software is interfaced with several quantum chemistry codes and atomic descriptors, such as the many-body tensor representation. QMLMaterial's capabilities are highlighted in the current work by its applications in the following systems: Na20, Mo6C3 (where the spin multiplicity was considered), H2O@CeNi3O5, Mg8@graphene, Na3Mg3@CNT (carbon nanotube).