Hou, Yi-Fan
Physics-informed active learning for accelerating quantum chemical simulations
Hou, Yi-Fan, Zhang, Lina, Zhang, Quanhao, Ge, Fuchun, Dral, Pavlo O.
Quantum chemical simulations can be greatly accelerated by constructing machine learning potentials, which is often done using active learning (AL). The usefulness of the constructed potentials is often limited by the high effort required and their insufficient robustness in the simulations. Here we introduce the end-to-end AL for constructing robust data-efficient potentials with affordable investment of time and resources and minimum human interference. Our AL protocol is based on the physics-informed sampling of training points, automatic selection of initial data, uncertainty quantification, and convergence monitoring. The versatility of this protocol is shown in our implementation of quasi-classical molecular dynamics for simulating vibrational spectra, conformer search of a key biochemical molecule, and timeresolved mechanism of the Diels-Alder reactions. These investigations took us days instead of weeks of pure quantum chemical calculations on a high-performance computing cluster. Introduction The introduction of machine learning potentials (MLPs) pushed the boundaries of what was previously possible in molecular dynamics (MD). MLPs enable simulations of longer time scales and larger systems with higher accuracy.
MLatom 3: Platform for machine learning-enhanced computational chemistry simulations and workflows
Dral, Pavlo O., Ge, Fuchun, Hou, Yi-Fan, Zheng, Peikun, Chen, Yuxinxin, Barbatti, Mario, Isayev, Olexandr, Wang, Cheng, Xue, Bao-Xin, Pinheiro, Max Jr, Su, Yuming, Dai, Yiheng, Chen, Yangtao, Zhang, Lina, Zhang, Shuang, Ullah, Arif, Zhang, Quanhao, Ou, Yanchi
Machine learning (ML) is increasingly becoming a common tool in computational chemistry. At the same time, the rapid development of ML methods requires a flexible software framework for designing custom workflows. MLatom 3 is a program package designed to leverage the power of ML to enhance typical computational chemistry simulations and to create complex workflows. This open-source package provides plenty of choice to the users who can run simulations with the command line options, input files, or with scripts using MLatom as a Python package, both on their computers and on the online XACS cloud computing at XACScloud.com. Computational chemists can calculate energies and thermochemical properties, optimize geometries, run molecular and quantum dynamics, and simulate (ro)vibrational, one-photon UV/vis absorption, and two-photon absorption spectra with ML, quantum mechanical, and combined models. The users can choose from an extensive library of methods containing pre-trained ML models and quantum mechanical approximations such as AIQM1 approaching coupled-cluster accuracy. The developers can build their own models using various ML algorithms. The great flexibility of MLatom is largely due to the extensive use of the interfaces to many state-of-the-art software packages and libraries.