Issue 35, 2013

Discovering crystals using shape matching and machine learning

Abstract

As the rate at which data can be amassed through computational simulation or experimental techniques accelerates, the pace of discovery becomes limited by the rate at which data can be analyzed. In this paper, a method is introduced by which new types of crystalline structures can be automatically identified from large data sets of coordinates. By deploying a hierarchy of pattern analysis techniques using shape matching and machine learning algorithms, local structures are extracted, classified, and then used to partition a data set into groups of common crystals. This method requires no a priori knowledge of what might be present in the data set. The method is applied to two data sets that contain both simple and complex crystals, including quasicrystals. We show how phase diagrams can be automatically generated and identify a crystal phase missed in prior analyses. By integrating shape matching and machine learning techniques to analyze rapidly produced databases, the discovery of new crystal structures and materials can be accelerated. This method is especially applicable to soft matter systems, where particle interactions can be exquisitely tuned and designed to drive the self-assembly of mesoscale materials with exotic structures.

Graphical abstract: Discovering crystals using shape matching and machine learning

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
24 May 2013
Accepted
22 Jul 2013
First published
30 Jul 2013

Soft Matter, 2013,9, 8552-8568

Discovering crystals using shape matching and machine learning

C. L. Phillips and G. A. Voth, Soft Matter, 2013, 9, 8552 DOI: 10.1039/C3SM51449H

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