MTRL-SCILGMar 7, 2025

opXRD: Open Experimental Powder X-ray Diffraction Database

arXiv:2503.05577v24 citationsh-index: 33Advanced Intelligent Discovery
Originality Synthesis-oriented
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This addresses a bottleneck in high-throughput materials discovery for researchers, though it is incremental as it provides a dataset rather than a new method.

The authors tackled the problem of limited experimental datasets for automated powder X-ray diffraction analysis by creating opXRD, an open database with 92,552 diffractograms (2,179 labeled) from various materials, aiming to improve model generalization to experimental data.

Powder X-ray diffraction (pXRD) experiments are a cornerstone for materials structure characterization. Despite their widespread application, analyzing pXRD diffractograms still presents a significant challenge to automation and a bottleneck in high-throughput discovery in self-driving labs. Machine learning promises to resolve this bottleneck by enabling automated powder diffraction analysis. A notable difficulty in applying machine learning to this domain is the lack of sufficiently sized experimental datasets, which has constrained researchers to train primarily on simulated data. However, models trained on simulated pXRD patterns showed limited generalization to experimental patterns, particularly for low-quality experimental patterns with high noise levels and elevated backgrounds. With the Open Experimental Powder X-Ray Diffraction Database (opXRD), we provide an openly available and easily accessible dataset of labeled and unlabeled experimental powder diffractograms. Labeled opXRD data can be used to evaluate the performance of models on experimental data and unlabeled opXRD data can help improve the performance of models on experimental data, e.g. through transfer learning methods. We collected 92552 diffractograms, 2179 of them labeled, from a wide spectrum of materials classes. We hope this ongoing effort can guide machine learning research toward fully automated analysis of pXRD data and thus enable future self-driving materials labs.

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