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Main Authors: Kılıç, Çetin, Güler-Kılıç, Sümeyra
Format: Preprint
Published: 2024
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2411.01197
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author Kılıç, Çetin
Güler-Kılıç, Sümeyra
author_facet Kılıç, Çetin
Güler-Kılıç, Sümeyra
contents Machine-learning interatomic potential models based on graph neural network architectures have the potential to make atomistic materials modeling widely accessible due to their computational efficiency, scalability, and broad applicability. The training datasets for many such models are derived from density-functional theory calculations, typically using a semilocal exchange-correlation functional. As a result, long-range interactions such as London dispersion are often missing in these models. We investigate whether this missing component can be addressed by combining a graph deep learning potential with semiempirical dispersion models. We assess this combination by deriving the equations of state for layered pnictogen chalcohalides BiTeBr and BiTeI and performing crystal structure optimizations for a broader set of V-VI-VII compounds with various stoichiometries, many of which possess van der Waals gaps. We characterize the optimized crystal structures by calculating their X-ray diffraction patterns and radial distribution function histograms, which are also used to compute Earth mover's distances to quantify the dissimilarity between the optimized and corresponding experimental structures. We find that dispersion-corrected graph deep learning potentials generally (though not universally) provide a more realistic description of these compounds due to the inclusion of van der Waals attractions. In particular, their use results in systematic improvements in predicting not only the van der Waals gap but also the layer thickness in layered V-VI-VII compounds. Our results demonstrate that the combined potentials studied here, derived from a straightforward approach that neither requires fine-tuning the training nor refitting the potential parameters, can significantly improve the description of layered polar crystals.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2411_01197
institution arXiv
publishDate 2024
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Combining graph deep learning and London dispersion interatomic potentials: A case study on pnictogen chalcohalides
Kılıç, Çetin
Güler-Kılıç, Sümeyra
Materials Science
Computational Physics
Machine-learning interatomic potential models based on graph neural network architectures have the potential to make atomistic materials modeling widely accessible due to their computational efficiency, scalability, and broad applicability. The training datasets for many such models are derived from density-functional theory calculations, typically using a semilocal exchange-correlation functional. As a result, long-range interactions such as London dispersion are often missing in these models. We investigate whether this missing component can be addressed by combining a graph deep learning potential with semiempirical dispersion models. We assess this combination by deriving the equations of state for layered pnictogen chalcohalides BiTeBr and BiTeI and performing crystal structure optimizations for a broader set of V-VI-VII compounds with various stoichiometries, many of which possess van der Waals gaps. We characterize the optimized crystal structures by calculating their X-ray diffraction patterns and radial distribution function histograms, which are also used to compute Earth mover's distances to quantify the dissimilarity between the optimized and corresponding experimental structures. We find that dispersion-corrected graph deep learning potentials generally (though not universally) provide a more realistic description of these compounds due to the inclusion of van der Waals attractions. In particular, their use results in systematic improvements in predicting not only the van der Waals gap but also the layer thickness in layered V-VI-VII compounds. Our results demonstrate that the combined potentials studied here, derived from a straightforward approach that neither requires fine-tuning the training nor refitting the potential parameters, can significantly improve the description of layered polar crystals.
title Combining graph deep learning and London dispersion interatomic potentials: A case study on pnictogen chalcohalides
topic Materials Science
Computational Physics
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2411.01197