Electronic structure prediction of multi-million atom systems through uncertainty quantification enabled transfer learning
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
12-1-2024
Abstract
The ground state electron density — obtainable using Kohn-Sham Density Functional Theory (KS-DFT) simulations — contains a wealth of material information, making its prediction via machine learning (ML) models attractive. However, the computational expense of KS-DFT scales cubically with system size which tends to stymie training data generation, making it difficult to develop quantifiably accurate ML models that are applicable across many scales and system configurations. Here, we address this fundamental challenge by employing transfer learning to leverage the multi-scale nature of the training data, while comprehensively sampling system configurations using thermalization. Our ML models are less reliant on heuristics, and being based on Bayesian neural networks, enable uncertainty quantification. We show that our models incur significantly lower data generation costs while allowing confident — and when verifiable, accurate — predictions for a wide variety of bulk systems well beyond training, including systems with defects, different alloy compositions, and at multi-million-atom scales. Moreover, such predictions can be carried out using only modest computational resources.
Publication Title
npj Computational Materials
Recommended Citation
Pathrudkar, S.,
Thiagarajan, P.,
Agarwal, S.,
Banerjee, A.,
&
Ghosh, S.
(2024).
Electronic structure prediction of multi-million atom systems through uncertainty quantification enabled transfer learning.
npj Computational Materials,
10(1).
http://doi.org/10.1038/s41524-024-01305-7
Retrieved from: https://digitalcommons.mtu.edu/michigantech-p2/976