QMCELGAug 4, 2025

Language Models Can Understand Spectra: A Multimodal Model for Molecular Structure Elucidation

arXiv:2508.08441v12 citationsh-index: 15
Originality Highly original
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This addresses the problem of high-cost, expert-dependent structure elucidation in natural sciences and engineering, offering a novel multimodal solution.

The paper tackles the challenge of molecular structure elucidation by proposing SpectraLLM, a multimodal large language model that processes single or multiple spectroscopic inputs for end-to-end structure prediction, achieving state-of-the-art performance on six chemical datasets and outperforming single-modality approaches.

Structure elucidation is a fundamental technique for understanding the microscopic composition of matter and is widely applied across various disciplines in the natural sciences and engineering. However, existing methods often rely heavily on prior databases or known structural information, making it difficult to resolve unknown structures. In addition, complex structures typically require the joint analysis of multiple spectroscopic modalities. This process heavily depends on expert domain knowledge and is often accompanied by high costs in terms of both time and instrumentation. To address these challenges, we propose SpectraLLM, the first large language model designed to support multi-modal spectroscopic joint reasoning. SpectraLLM is capable of processing either single or multiple spectroscopic inputs and performing end-to-end structure elucidation. By integrating continuous and discrete spectroscopic modalities into a shared semantic space, SpectraLLM learns to uncover substructural patterns that are consistent and complementary across spectra, enabling precise molecular structure elucidation. We pretrain and fine-tune SpectraLLM in the domain of small molecules, and evaluate it on six standardized, publicly available chemical datasets. The model achieves state-of-the-art performance, significantly outperforming existing approaches trained on single modalities. Notably, SpectraLLM demonstrates strong robustness and generalization even for single-spectrum inference, while its multi-modal reasoning capability further improves the accuracy of structural prediction.

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