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Automatized discovery of polymer membranes with AI generative design and molecular dynamics simulations

Ronaldo Giro1*, Hsianghan Hsu2*, Akihiro Kishimoto2*, Seiji Takeda2*, Lisa Hamada2*, Mathias B. Steiner1*

1 IBM Research Brazil

2 IBM Research Tokyo

* Corresponding authors emails: rgiro@br.ibm.com, HHHSU@jp.ibm.com, Akihiro.Kishimoto@ibm.com, SEIJITKD@jp.ibm.com, Lisa.Hamada@ibm.com, mathiast@br.ibm.com
DOI10.24435/materialscloud:ss-fq [version v1]

Publication date: Apr 27, 2022

How to cite this record

Ronaldo Giro, Hsianghan Hsu, Akihiro Kishimoto, Seiji Takeda, Lisa Hamada, Mathias B. Steiner, Automatized discovery of polymer membranes with AI generative design and molecular dynamics simulations, Materials Cloud Archive 2022.56 (2022), https://doi.org/10.24435/materialscloud:ss-fq

Description

The computational generation of molecules with Artificial Intelligence (AI) is poised to revolutionize materials discovery. Potential applications range from development of potent drugs to efficient carbon capture and separation technologies. However, existing approaches lack either automatized training data creation or computational performance validation at meso-scale where complex properties of amorphous materials emerge. The methodological gaps have so far limited AI based materials design to small-molecule applications. Here, we report the first automatized discovery of complex materials through inverse molecular design which is informed by meso-scale target features resembling application-level figures-of-merit. We have entered the new discovery regime by computationally designing and validating hundreds of unknown polymer candidates for application in post-combustion carbon dioxide separation. Specifically, we have validated each discovery step, from automatized input data set creation, via graph-based generative design of optimized monomer units, to molecular dynamics simulation of gas filtration by newly discovered polymer membranes. For the latter, we have devised a Minimum Representative Volume method enabling reliable polymer permeability predictions at about 1,000x the volume of an individual, AI-generated monomer. The overall AI discovery and physical validation cycle time per polymer candidate is of the order of 200 hours in a standard computing environment, offering an alternative to lab screening routines that can take months to complete. The inclusion of additional target properties in the optimization workflow and the extension of generative algorithms to the design of larger, more complex molecular entities will improve the outcome and benefit the broader applicability of computational materials discovery. The data-set show the CO2 permeability, glass transition temperature and half decomposition temperature for 1,200 homo-polymers used to train our AI model.

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Files

File name Size Description
ppf_API_demo.ipynb
MD5md5:468d276cf957d2636c5876ac76f9f973
11.1 KiB Jupyter notebook with an example of how to use the Polymer Property Prediction Engine with APIs (application programming interface)
example.csv
MD5md5:77a1abfca19c1a53bfc954c0372338b6
550 Bytes Input file data-set for the Jupyter notebook
PCO2-Tg-Thd-data-all-simulated.csv
MD5md5:534cf22962db6838cb93cd023a1c2306
189.1 KiB 1,169 calculated homo-polymers properties: IUPAC polymer name, OPSIN SMILES, log10( CO2 permeability (Barrer)), glass transition temperature (K) and half decomposition temperature (K)
results_monomers_generative_model.csv
MD5md5:50e094dcc18de52b03a67cc6d4e8a6c9
81.7 KiB 784 homopolymers generated by Inverse Design and Machine Learning techniques with the OPSIN SMILES, glass transition temperature (Tg), half decomposition temperature (Thf) and CO2 permeability (PCO2). Tg and Thf are calculated using Polymer Property Prediction Engine, and PCO2 was calculated by the Machine Learning regression model.

License

Files and data are licensed under the terms of the following license: Materials Cloud non-exclusive license to distribute v1.0. CDLA-Sharing-1.0
Metadata, except for email addresses, are licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution Share-Alike 4.0 International license.

External references

Preprint (Preprint where the data is discussed)
R. Giro et al.

Keywords

Polymeric membranes CO2 separation Carbon dioxide separation