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Emergent functionalities of structural and topological defects in ferroelectric materials underpin an extremely broad spectrum of applications ranging from domain wall electronics to high dielectric and electromechanical responses. Many of these have been discovered and quantified via local scanning probe microscopy methods. However, the search for these functionalities has until now been based by either trial and error or using auxiliary information such as topography or domain wall structure to identify potential objects of interest based on the intuition of operator or preexisting hypotheses, with subsequent manual exploration. Here, we report the development and implementation of a machine learning framework that actively discovers relationships between local domain structure and polarization switching characteristics in ferroelectric materials encoded in the hysteresis loop. The latter and descriptors such as nucleation bias, coercive bias, hysteresis loop area, or more complex functionals of hysteresis loop shape and corresponding uncertainties are used to guide the discovery via automated piezoresponse force microscopy (PFM) and spectroscopy experiments. As such, this approach combines the power of machine learning methods to learn the correlative relationships between high dimensional data, and human-based physics insights encoded in the acquisition function. For ferroelectric, this automated workflow demonstrates that the discovery path and sampling points of on-field and off-field hysteresis loops are largely different, indicating the on-field and off-field hysteresis loops are dominated by different mechanisms. The proposed approach is universal and can be applied to a broad range of modern imaging and spectroscopy methods ranging from other scanning probe microscopy modalities to electron microscopy and chemical imaging.
ABX3 perovskites have attracted intensive research interest in recent years due to their versatile composition and superior optoelectronic properties. Their counterparts, antiperovskites (X3BA), can be viewed as electronically inverted perovskite der
Active learning - the field of machine learning (ML) dedicated to optimal experiment design, has played a part in science as far back as the 18th century when Laplace used it to guide his discovery of celestial mechanics [1]. In this work we focus a
Machine learning (ML) of quantum mechanical properties shows promise for accelerating chemical discovery. For transition metal chemistry where accurate calculations are computationally costly and available training data sets are small, the molecular
Machine Learning (ML) has the potential to accelerate discovery of new materials and shed light on useful properties of existing materials. A key difficulty when applying ML in Materials Science is that experimental datasets of material properties te
Regression machine learning is widely applied to predict various materials. However, insufficient materials data usually leads to a poor performance. Here, we develop a new voting data-driven method that could generally improve the performance of reg