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Publication date: Oct 22, 2024
Advances in machine learning have led to the development of foundation models for atomistic materials chemistry, enabling quantum-accurate descriptions of interatomic forces across diverse compounds at reduced computational cost. Hitherto, these models have been benchmarked relying on descriptors based on atoms' interaction energies or harmonic vibrations; their accuracy and efficiency in predicting observable and technologically relevant heat-conduction properties remains unknown. Here, we introduce a framework that leverages foundation models and the Wigner formulation of heat transport to overcome the major bottlenecks of current methods for designing heat-management materials: high cost, limited transferability, or lack of physics awareness. We present the standards needed to achieve first-principles accuracy in conductivity predictions through model's fine-tuning, discussing benchmark metrics and precision/cost trade-offs. We apply our framework to a database of solids with diverse compositions and structures, demonstrating its potential to discover materials for next-gen technologies ranging from thermal insulation to neuromorphic computing.
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File name | Size | Description |
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data.zip
MD5md5:b55af517e53a86693990ab00f783d3e4
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359.8 MiB | Dataset containing reference DFT thermal conductivity results, as well as scripts and data used for fine-tuning. |
2024.171 (version v1) [This version] | Oct 22, 2024 | DOI10.24435/materialscloud:2d-4b |