A chemical language model for reticular materials design

arXiv:2603.2038975.7h-index: 19
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This addresses the problem of limited systematic discovery of reticular materials for researchers in chemistry and materials science, representing a new paradigm rather than incremental progress.

The researchers tackled the challenge of discovering new metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) by introducing Nexerra-R1, a chemical language model that generates organic linkers for inverse design, resulting in the proposal of a previously unreported framework, CU-525, generated entirely in silico.

Reticular chemistry has enabled the synthesis of tens of thousands of metal-organic frameworks (MOFs), yet the discovery of new materials still relies largely on intuition-driven linker design and iterative experimentation. As a result, researchers explore only a small fraction of the vast chemical space accessible to reticular materials, limiting the systematic discovery of frameworks with targeted properties. Here, we introduce Nexerra-R1, a building-block chemical language model that enables inverse design in reticular chemistry through the targeted generation of organic linkers. Rather than generating complete frameworks directly, Nexerra-R1 operates at the level of molecular building blocks, preserving the modular logic that underpins reticular synthesis. The model supports both unconstrained generation of low-connectivity linkers and scaffold-constrained design of symmetric multidentate motifs compatible with predefined nodes and topologies. We further combine linker generation with flow-guided distributional targeting to steer the generative process toward application-relevant objectives while maintaining chemical validity and assembly feasibility. The generated linkers are subsequently assembled into three-dimensional frameworks and are structurally optimized to produce candidate materials compatible with experimental synthesis. Using Nexerra-R1, we validate this strategy by rediscovering known MOFs and by proposing the experimental synthesis of a previously unreported framework, CU-525, generated entirely in silico. Together, these results establish a general inverse-design paradigm for reticular materials in which controllable chemical language modelling enables the direct translation from computational design to synthesizable frameworks.

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