Christopher Karpovich

h-index64
2papers

2 Papers

MTRL-SCIOct 21, 2022
Deep Reinforcement Learning for Inverse Inorganic Materials Design

Elton Pan, Christopher Karpovich, Elsa Olivetti

A major obstacle to the realization of novel inorganic materials with desirable properties is the inability to perform efficient optimization across both materials properties and synthesis of those materials. In this work, we propose a reinforcement learning (RL) approach to inverse inorganic materials design, which can identify promising compounds with specified properties and synthesizability constraints. Our model learns chemical guidelines such as charge and electronegativity neutrality while maintaining chemical diversity and uniqueness. We demonstrate a multi-objective RL approach, which can generate novel compounds with targeted materials properties including formation energy and bulk/shear modulus alongside a lower sintering temperature synthesis objectives. Using this approach, the model can predict promising compounds of interest, while suggesting an optimized chemical design space for inorganic materials discovery.

MTRL-SCIDec 23, 2024
Emerging Microelectronic Materials by Design: Navigating Combinatorial Design Space with Scarce and Dispersed Data

Hengrui Zhang, Alexandru B. Georgescu, Suraj Yerramilli et al.

The increasing demands of sustainable energy, electronics, and biomedical applications call for next-generation functional materials with unprecedented properties. Of particular interest are emerging materials that display exceptional physical properties, making them promising candidates in energy-efficient microelectronic devices. As the conventional Edisonian approach becomes significantly outpaced by growing societal needs, emerging computational modeling and machine learning (ML) methods are employed for the rational design of materials. However, the complex physical mechanisms, cost of first-principles calculations, and the dispersity and scarcity of data pose challenges to both physics-based and data-driven materials modeling. Moreover, the combinatorial composition-structure design space is high-dimensional and often disjoint, making design optimization nontrivial. In this Account, we review a team effort toward establishing a framework that integrates data-driven and physics-based methods to address these challenges and accelerate materials design. We begin by presenting our integrated materials design framework and its three components in a general context. We then provide an example of applying this materials design framework to metal-insulator transition (MIT) materials, a specific type of emerging materials with practical importance in next-generation memory technologies. We identify multiple new materials which may display this property and propose pathways for their synthesis. Finally, we identify some outstanding challenges in data-driven materials design, such as materials data quality issues and property-performance mismatch. We seek to raise awareness of these overlooked issues hindering materials design, thus stimulating efforts toward developing methods to mitigate the gaps.