density optimization
Stable and Accurate Orbital-Free DFT Powered by Machine Learning
Remme, Roman, Kaczun, Tobias, Ebert, Tim, Gehrig, Christof A., Geng, Dominik, Gerhartz, Gerrit, Ickler, Marc K., Klockow, Manuel V., Lippmann, Peter, Schmidt, Johannes S., Wagner, Simon, Dreuw, Andreas, Hamprecht, Fred A.
Hohenberg and Kohn have proven that the electronic energy and the one-particle electron density can, in principle, be obtained by minimizing an energy functional with respect to the density. Given that decades of theoretical work have so far failed to produce this elusive exact energy functional promising great computational savings, it is reasonable to try and learn it empirically. Using rotationally equivariant atomistic machine learning, we obtain for the first time a density functional that, when applied to the organic molecules in QM9, yields energies with chemical accuracy while also converging to meaningful electron densities. Augmenting the training data with densities obtained from perturbed potentials proved key to these advances. Altogether, we are now closer than ever to fulfilling Hohenberg and Kohn's promise, paving the way for more efficient calculations in large molecular systems. 1 arXiv:2503.00443v1 The proof marked a radical departure from most prior work, which had ...
- Europe > United Kingdom > England > Oxfordshire > Oxford (0.04)
- Europe > United Kingdom > England > Cambridgeshire > Cambridge (0.04)
- Europe > Germany > Baden-Württemberg > Karlsruhe Region > Heidelberg (0.04)
- Materials > Chemicals (0.46)
- Health & Medicine (0.46)
KineticNet: Deep learning a transferable kinetic energy functional for orbital-free density functional theory
Remme, Roman, Kaczun, Tobias, Scheurer, Maximilian, Dreuw, Andreas, Hamprecht, Fred A.
Orbital-free density functional theory (OF-DFT) holds the promise to compute ground state molecular properties at minimal cost. However, it has been held back by our inability to compute the kinetic energy as a functional of the electron density only. We here set out to learn the kinetic energy functional from ground truth provided by the more expensive Kohn-Sham density functional theory. Such learning is confronted with two key challenges: Giving the model sufficient expressivity and spatial context while limiting the memory footprint to afford computations on a GPU; and creating a sufficiently broad distribution of training data to enable iterative density optimization even when starting from a poor initial guess. In response, we introduce KineticNet, an equivariant deep neural network architecture based on point convolutions adapted to the prediction of quantities on molecular quadrature grids. Important contributions include convolution filters with sufficient spatial resolution in the vicinity of the nuclear cusp, an atom-centric sparse but expressive architecture that relays information across multiple bond lengths; and a new strategy to generate varied training data by finding ground state densities in the face of perturbations by a random external potential. KineticNet achieves, for the first time, chemical accuracy of the learned functionals across input densities and geometries of tiny molecules. For two electron systems, we additionally demonstrate OF-DFT density optimization with chemical accuracy.
M-OFDFT: Overcoming the Barrier of Orbital-Free Density Functional Theory for Molecular Systems Using Deep Learning
Zhang, He, Liu, Siyuan, You, Jiacheng, Liu, Chang, Zheng, Shuxin, Lu, Ziheng, Wang, Tong, Zheng, Nanning, Shao, Bin
Orbital-free density functional theory (OFDFT) is a quantum chemistry formulation that has a lower cost scaling than the prevailing Kohn-Sham DFT, which is increasingly desired for contemporary molecular research. However, its accuracy is limited by the kinetic energy density functional, which is notoriously hard to approximate for non-periodic molecular systems. In this work, we propose M-OFDFT, an OFDFT approach capable of solving molecular systems using a deep-learning functional model. We build the essential nonlocality into the model, which is made affordable by the concise density representation as expansion coefficients under an atomic basis. With techniques to address unconventional learning challenges therein, M-OFDFT achieves a comparable accuracy with Kohn-Sham DFT on a wide range of molecules untouched by OFDFT before. More attractively, M-OFDFT extrapolates well to molecules much larger than those in training, which unleashes the appealing scaling for studying large molecules including proteins, representing an advancement of the accuracy-efficiency trade-off frontier in quantum chemistry.
- North America > United States (0.45)
- Asia > China (0.27)
- Europe (0.14)
- Health & Medicine > Pharmaceuticals & Biotechnology (0.67)
- Materials > Chemicals (0.47)
- Energy > Oil & Gas (0.45)