Discovery of new high-pressure phases – integrating high-throughput DFT simulations, graph neural networks, and active learning

Abstract Pressure-induced phase transformations in materials are of interest in a range of fields, including geophysics, planetary sciences, and shock physics. In addition, the high-pressure phases can exhibit desirable properties, eliciting interest in materials science. Despite its importance, the...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ching-Chien Chen, Robert J. Appleton, Saswat Mishra, Kat Nykiel, Alejandro Strachan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nature Portfolio 2025-06-01
Series:npj Computational Materials
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1038/s41524-025-01682-7
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Summary:Abstract Pressure-induced phase transformations in materials are of interest in a range of fields, including geophysics, planetary sciences, and shock physics. In addition, the high-pressure phases can exhibit desirable properties, eliciting interest in materials science. Despite its importance, the process of finding new high-pressure phases, either experimentally or computationally, is time-consuming and often driven by intuition. In this study, we use graph neural networks trained on density functional theory (DFT) equation of state data of 2258 materials and 7255 phases to identify potential phase transitions. The model is used to explore possible phase transitions in 7677 pairs of phases and promising cases are confirmed or denied via DFT calculations. Importantly, the new data is added to the training set, the model is refined, and a new cycle of discovery is started. Within 13 iterations, we discovered 28 new high-pressure stable phases (never synthesized through high-pressure routes nor reported in high-pressure computational works) and rediscovered 18 pressure-induced phase transitions. The results provide new insight and classification of pressure-induced phase transitions in terms of the ambient properties of the phases involved.
ISSN:2057-3960