The Phase Stability Network of all Inorganic Materials
Vinay I. Hegde, Muratahan Aykol, Scott Kirklin, Chris, Wolverton

TL;DR
This paper constructs and analyzes a comprehensive network of inorganic materials based on their thermodynamic stability, revealing insights into material relationships and introducing a new metric for material reactivity called the 'nobility index.'
Contribution
It presents the first large-scale network of all inorganic materials' phase stability, uncovering its topology and proposing a novel reactivity metric derived from network connectivity.
Findings
The network contains 21,000 stable compounds and 41 million tie-lines.
Node connectivity follows a lognormal distribution and decreases with more elements.
The 'nobility index' effectively identifies the most noble materials.
Abstract
One of the holy grails of materials science, unlocking structure-property relationships, has largely been pursued via bottom-up investigations of how the arrangement of atoms and interatomic bonding in a material determine its macroscopic behavior. Here we consider a complementary approach, a top-down study of the organizational structure of networks of materials, based on the interaction between materials themselves. We unravel the complete "phase stability network of all inorganic materials" as a densely-connected complex network of 21,000 thermodynamically stable compounds (nodes) interlinked by 41 million tie-lines (edges) defining their two-phase equilibria, as computed by high-throughput density functional theory. We find that the node connectivity in the materials network has a lognormal distribution, and the connectivity decreases with the number of elemental constituents in a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsX-ray Diffraction in Crystallography · Material Science and Thermodynamics · Solidification and crystal growth phenomena
