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Crystal Diffusion Variational Autoencoder for Periodic Material Generation

ORAL

Abstract

Generating the periodic structure of stable materials is a long-standing challenge for the inverse design of solid-state materials. This task is difficult because stable materials only exist in a low-dimensional subspace of all possible periodic arrangements of atoms: 1) the coordinates must lie in the local energy minimum defined by quantum mechanics, and 2) global stability also requires the structure to follow the complex, yet specific bonding preferences between different atom types. Existing methods fail to incorporate these factors and often lack proper invariances. We propose a Crystal Diffusion Variational Autoencoder (CDVAE) that captures the physical inductive bias of material stability. By learning from the data distribution of stable materials, the decoder generates materials in a diffusion process that moves atomic coordinates towards a lower energy state and updates atom types to satisfy bonding preferences between neighbors. Our model also explicitly encodes interactions across periodic boundaries and respects permutation, translation, rotation, and periodic invariances. We significantly outperform past methods in three tasks: 1) reconstructing the input structure, 2) generating valid, diverse, and realistic materials, and 3) generating materials that optimize a specific property. Our approach opens exciting new opportunities for the property-guided inverse design of solid-state materials for various important applications.

Publication: Arxiv: https://arxiv.org/abs/2110.06197<br>Under review at the Tenth International Conference on Learning Representations (ICLR 2022)

Presenters

  • Tian Xie

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Authors

  • Tian Xie

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology

  • Xiang Fu

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology MI, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

  • Octavian Ganea

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology

  • Regina Barzilay

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology

  • Tommi S Jaakkola

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology