LGMTRL-SCIDec 7, 2025

OXtal: An All-Atom Diffusion Model for Organic Crystal Structure Prediction

arXiv:2512.06987v13 citationsh-index: 17
Originality Highly original
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This addresses the crystal structure prediction problem in computational chemistry, with applications in pharmaceuticals and organic semiconductors, representing a significant advance over existing approaches.

The paper tackles the challenge of predicting 3D organic crystal structures from 2D chemical graphs by introducing OXtal, a diffusion model that achieves over 80% packing similarity and recovers experimental structures with conformer RMSD1 < 0.5 Å, showing orders-of-magnitude improvements over prior methods.

Accurately predicting experimentally-realizable 3D molecular crystal structures from their 2D chemical graphs is a long-standing open challenge in computational chemistry called crystal structure prediction (CSP). Efficiently solving this problem has implications ranging from pharmaceuticals to organic semiconductors, as crystal packing directly governs the physical and chemical properties of organic solids. In this paper, we introduce OXtal, a large-scale 100M parameter all-atom diffusion model that directly learns the conditional joint distribution over intramolecular conformations and periodic packing. To efficiently scale OXtal, we abandon explicit equivariant architectures imposing inductive bias arising from crystal symmetries in favor of data augmentation strategies. We further propose a novel crystallization-inspired lattice-free training scheme, Stoichiometric Stochastic Shell Sampling ($S^4$), that efficiently captures long-range interactions while sidestepping explicit lattice parametrization -- thus enabling more scalable architectural choices at all-atom resolution. By leveraging a large dataset of 600K experimentally validated crystal structures (including rigid and flexible molecules, co-crystals, and solvates), OXtal achieves orders-of-magnitude improvements over prior ab initio machine learning CSP methods, while remaining orders of magnitude cheaper than traditional quantum-chemical approaches. Specifically, OXtal recovers experimental structures with conformer $\text{RMSD}_1<0.5$ Å and attains over 80\% packing similarity rate, demonstrating its ability to model both thermodynamic and kinetic regularities of molecular crystallization.

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