MTRL-SCILGDec 6, 2023

AI-guided inverse design and discovery of recyclable vitrimeric polymers

arXiv:2312.03690v420 citationsh-index: 20Adv Sci
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This provides polymer chemists with a tool for designing sustainable, recyclable polymers, though it is incremental as it builds on existing inverse design and vitrimer concepts.

The researchers tackled the limited property space of vitrimeric polymers by developing an AI-guided inverse design framework using molecular dynamics simulations and a novel graph variational autoencoder, resulting in the discovery and synthesis of a novel vitrimer with a glass transition temperature close to the target (311-317 K vs. 323 K).

Vitrimer is a new, exciting class of sustainable polymers with the ability to heal due to their dynamic covalent adaptive network that can go through associative rearrangement reactions. However, a limited choice of constituent molecules restricts their property space, prohibiting full realization of their potential applications. To overcome this challenge, we couple molecular dynamics (MD) simulations and a novel graph variational autoencoder (VAE) machine learning model for inverse design of vitrimer chemistries with desired glass transition temperature (Tg) and synthesize a novel vitrimer polymer. We build the first vitrimer dataset of one million chemistries and calculate Tg on 8,424 of them by high-throughput MD simulations calibrated by a Gaussian process model. The proposed novel VAE employs dual graph encoders and a latent dimension overlapping scheme which allows for individual representation of multi-component vitrimers. By constructing a continuous latent space containing necessary information of vitrimers, we demonstrate high accuracy and efficiency of our framework in discovering novel vitrimers with desirable Tg beyond the training regime. To validate the effectiveness of our framework in experiments, we generate novel vitrimer chemistries with a target Tg = 323 K. By incorporating chemical intuition, we synthesize a vitrimer with Tg of 311-317 K, and experimentally demonstrate healability and flowability. The proposed framework offers an exciting tool for polymer chemists to design and synthesize novel, sustainable vitrimer polymers for a facet of applications.

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