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AlphaCrystal: Contact map based crystal structure prediction using deep learning

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 Added by Jianjun Hu
 Publication date 2021
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




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Crystal structure prediction is one of the major unsolved problems in materials science. Traditionally, this problem is formulated as a global optimization problem for which global search algorithms are combined with first principle free energy calculations to predict the ground-state crystal structure given only a material composition or a chemical system. These ab initio algorithms usually cannot exploit a large amount of implicit physicochemical rules or geometric constraints (deep knowledge) of atom configurations embodied in a large number of known crystal structures. Inspired by the deep learning enabled breakthrough in protein structure prediction, herein we propose AlphaCrystal, a crystal structure prediction algorithm that combines a deep residual neural network model that learns deep knowledge to guide predicting the atomic contact map of a target crystal material followed by reconstructing its 3D crystal structure using genetic algorithms. Based on the experiments of a selected set of benchmark crystal materials, we show that our AlphaCrystal algorithm can predict structures close to the ground truth structures. It can also speed up the crystal structure prediction process by predicting and exploiting the predicted contact map so that it has the potential to handle relatively large systems. We believe that our deep learning based ab initio crystal structure prediction method that learns from existing material structures can be used to scale up current crystal structure prediction practice. To our knowledge, AlphaCrystal is the first neural network based algorithm for crystal structure contact map prediction and the first method for directly reconstructing crystal structures from materials composition, which can be further optimized by DFT calculations.



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Crystal structure prediction is now playing an increasingly important role in discovery of new materials. Global optimization methods such as genetic algorithms (GA) and particle swarm optimization (PSO) have been combined with first principle free energy calculations to predict crystal structures given composition or only a chemical system. While these approaches can exploit certain crystal patterns such as symmetry and periodicity in their search process, they usually do not exploit the large amount of implicit rules and constraints of atom configurations embodied in the large number of known crystal structures. They currently can only handle crystal structure prediction of relatively small systems. Inspired by the knowledge-rich protein structure prediction approach, herein we explore whether known geometric constraints such as the atomic contact map of a target crystal material can help predict its structure given its space group information. We propose a global optimization based algorithm, CMCrystal, for crystal structure reconstruction based on atomic contact maps. Based on extensive experiments using six global optimization algorithms, we show that it is viable to reconstruct the crystal structure given the atomic contact map for some crystal materials but more constraints are needed for other target materials to achieve successful reconstruction. This implies that atomic interaction information learned from existing materials can be used to improve crystal structure prediction.
Geometric information such as the space groups and crystal systems plays an important role in the properties of crystal materials. Prediction of crystal system and space group thus has wide applications in crystal material property estimation and structure prediction. Previous works on experimental X-ray diffraction (XRD) and density functional theory (DFT) based structure determination methods achieved outstanding performance, but they are not applicable for large-scale screening of materials compositions. There are also machine learning models using Magpie descriptors for composition based material space group determination, but their prediction accuracy only ranges between 0.638 and 0.907 in different kinds of crystals. Herein, we report an improved machine learning model for predicting the crystal system and space group of materials using only the formula information. Benchmark study on a dataset downloaded from Materials Project Database shows that our random forest models based on our new descriptor set, achieve significant performance improvements compared with previous work with accuracy scores ranging between 0.712 and 0.961 in terms of space group classification. Our model also shows large performance improvement for crystal system prediction. Trained models and source code are freely available at url{https://github.com/Yuxinya/SG_predict}
156 - A.R. Oganov , C.W. Glass 2009
We have developed an efficient and reliable methodology for crystal structure prediction, merging ab initio total-energy calculations and a specifically devised evolutionary algorithm. This method allows one to predict the most stable crystal structure and a number of low-energy metastable structures for a given compound at any P-T conditions without requiring any experimental input. Extremely high success rate has been observed in a few tens of tests done so far, including ionic, covalent, metallic, and molecular structures with up to 40 atoms in the unit cell. We have been able to resolve some important problems in high-pressure crystallography and report a number of new high-pressure crystal structures. Physical reasons for the success of this methodology are discussed.
Crystal structure determines properties of materials. With the crystal structure of a chemical substance, many physical and chemical properties can be predicted by first-principles calculations or machine learning models. Since it is relatively easy to generate a hypothetical chemically valid formula, crystal structure prediction becomes an important method for discovering new materials. In our previous work, we proposed a contact map-based crystal structure prediction method, which uses global optimization algorithms such as genetic algorithms to maximize the match between the contact map of the predicted structure and the contact map of the real crystal structure to search for the coordinates at the Wyckoff Positions(WP). However, when predicting the crystal structure with high symmetry, we found that the global optimization algorithm has difficulty to find an effective combination of WPs that satisfies the chemical formula, which is mainly caused by the inconsistency between the dimensionality of the contact map of the predicted crystal structure and the dimensionality of the contact map of the target crystal structure. This makes it challenging to predict the crystal structures of high-symmetry crystals. In order to solve this problem, here we propose to use PyXtal to generate and filter random crystal structures with given symmetry constraints based on the information such as chemical formulas and space groups. With contact map as the optimization goal, we use differential evolution algorithms to search for non-special coordinates at the Wyckoff positions to realize the structure prediction of high-symmetry crystal materials. Our experimental results show that our proposed algorithm CMCrystalHS can effectively solve the problem of inconsistent contact map dimensions and predict the crystal structures with high symmetry.
Crystal structure prediction is a central problem of theoretical crystallography and materials science, which until mid-2000s was considered intractable. Several methods, based on either energy landscape exploration$^{1,2}$ or, more commonly, global optimization$^{3-8}$, largely solved this problem and enabled fully non-empirical computational materials discovery$^{9,10}$. A major shortcoming is that, to avoid expensive calculations of the entropy, crystal structure prediction was done at zero Kelvin and searched for the global minimum of the enthalpy, rather than free energy. As a consequence, high-temperature phases (especially those which are not quenchable to zero temperature) could be missed. Here we develop an accurate and affordable solution, enabling crystal structure prediction at finite temperatures. Structure relaxation and fully anharmonic free energy calculations are done by molecular dynamics with a force field (which can be anything from a parametric force field for simpler cases to a trained on-the-fly machine learning interatomic potential), the errors of which are corrected using thermodynamic perturbation theory to yield accurate ab initio results. We test the accuracy of this method on metals (probing the P-T phase diagram of Al and Fe), a refractory intermetallide (WB), and a significantly ionic ceramic compound (Earth-forming silicate MgSiO3 at pressures and temperatures of the Earths lower mantle). We find that the hcp-phase of aluminum has a wider stability field than previously thought, and the temperature-induced transition $alpha$-$beta$ in WB occurs at 2789 K. It is also found that iron has hcp structure at conditions of the Earths inner core, and the much debated (and important for constraining Earths thermal structure) Clapeyron slope of the post-perovskite phase transition in MgSiO3 is 5.88 MPa/K.
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