Learning Atoms from Crystal Structure
Andrij Vasylenko (1), Dmytro Antypov (1), Sven Schewe (2), Luke M., Daniels (1), John B. Claridge (1), Matthew S. Dyer (1), Matthew J. Rosseinsky, (1), ((1) Department of Chemistry, University of Liverpool, Crown Street,, United Kingdom, (2) Department of Computer Science

TL;DR
This paper introduces LEAFs, a novel structural descriptor for elements that enables accurate, composition-based material property predictions and structure discovery without requiring detailed crystal structures.
Contribution
LEAFs incorporate local coordination geometry into elemental descriptors, allowing structure-informed modeling from compositions alone, advancing materials discovery.
Findings
Achieved 86% accuracy in predicting binary ionic crystal structures.
Enabled structure-informed property predictions from compositions.
Mapped chemical space using structural insights.
Abstract
Computational modelling of materials using machine learning, ML, and historical data has become integral to materials research. The efficiency of computational modelling is strongly affected by the choice of the numerical representation for describing the composition, structure and chemical elements. Structure controls the properties, but often only the composition of a candidate material is available. Existing elemental descriptors lack direct access to structural insights such as the coordination geometry of an element. In this study, we introduce Local Environment-induced Atomic Features, LEAFs, which incorporate information about the statistically preferred local coordination geometry for atoms in crystal structure into descriptors for chemical elements, enabling the modelling of materials solely as compositions without requiring knowledge of their crystal structure. In the crystal…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsHistory and advancements in chemistry · X-ray Diffraction in Crystallography
