Accelerating High-Throughput Phonon Calculations via Machine Learning Universal Potentials

ORAL

Abstract

Phonons play a critical role in determining various material properties, but conventional phonon calculations are computationally intensive, limiting their broad applicability. This study presents an approach to accelerate high-throughput harmonic phonon calculations using machine learning universal potentials (MLIPs) with an efficient training dataset generation strategy. Instead of computing phonon properties from a large number of supercells with small atomic displacements, we use a smaller subset of supercell structures with relatively large displacements (0.01 to 0.05 Å), significantly reducing computational costs. We train a state-of-the-art MLIP based on multi-atomic cluster expansion (MACE), on a comprehensive dataset of 2,738 materials with 77 elements, totaling 15,670 supercell structures, computed using high-fidelity density functional theory (DFT) calculations. The trained model is validated against phonon calculations for a held-out subset of 384 materials, achieving a mean absolute error (MAE) of 0.18 THz for vibrational frequencies from full phonon dispersions, 2.19 meV/atom for Helmholtz vibrational free energies at 300 K, as well as a classification accuracy of 86.2% for dynamical stability of materials. A thermodynamic analysis of polymorphic stability in 126 systems demonstrates good agreement with DFT results at 300 K and 1000 K. In addition, the diverse and extensive high-quality DFT dataset curated serves as a valuable resource for future MLIP models.

*H. L. and Y. X. acknowledge support from the US National Science Foundation through award 2317008. C. W. acknowledges support from the NSF through the Office of Advanced Cyberstructure under award OAC-2311203. We acknowledge the computing resources provided by Bridges2 at Pittsburgh Supercomputing Center (PSC) through allocations mat220006p and mat220008p from the Advanced Cyber-infrastructure Coordination Ecosystem: Services \& Support (ACCESS) program, which is supported by National Science Foundation grants \#2138259, \#2138286, \#2138307, \#2137603, and \#2138296.

Publication: https://arxiv.org/pdf/2407.09674 (preprint)

Presenters

  • Huiju Lee

    • Portland State University

Authors

  • Huiju Lee

    • Portland State University
  • Vinay I Hegde

    • Northwestern University
  • Christopher M Wolverton

    • Northwestern University
  • Yi Xia

    • Portland State University
    • Northwestern University