Affiliation:
1. Département de physique and Regroupement québécois sur les matériaux de pointe, Université de Montréal , Case Postale 6128, Succursale Centre-ville, Montréal, Québec H3C 3J7, Canada
Abstract
In the last few years, much effort has gone into developing general machine-learning potentials capable of describing interactions for a wide range of structures and phases. Yet, as attention turns to more complex materials, including alloys and disordered and heterogeneous systems, the challenge of providing reliable descriptions for all possible environments becomes ever more costly. In this work, we evaluate the benefits of using specific vs general potentials for the study of activated mechanisms in solid-state materials. More specifically, we test three machine-learning fitting approaches using the moment-tensor potential to reproduce a reference potential when exploring the energy landscape around a vacancy in Stillinger–Weber silicon crystal and silicon–germanium zincblende structures using the activation-relaxation technique nouveau (ARTn). We find that a targeted on-the-fly approach specific to and integrated into ARTn generates the highest precision on the energetics and geometry of activated barriers while remaining cost-effective. This approach expands the types of problems that can be addressed with high-accuracy ML potential.
Funder
Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada
Compute Canada
Institut de Valorisation des Données
Subject
Physical and Theoretical Chemistry,General Physics and Astronomy