64 research outputs found

    The Phase Diagram of all Inorganic Materials

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    Understanding how the arrangement of atoms and their interactions determine material behavior has been the dominant paradigm in materials science. A complementary approach is studying the organizational structure of networks of materials, defined on the basis of interactions between materials themselves. In this work, we present the "phase diagram of all known inorganic materials", an extremely-dense complex network of nearly 2.1×1042.1 \times 10^4 stable inorganic materials (nodes) connected with 41×10641 \times 10^6 tie-lines (edges) defining their two-phase equilibria, as computed via high-throughput density functional theory. We show that the degree distribution of this network follows a lognormal form, with each material connected to on average 18% of the other materials in the network via tie-lines. Analyzing the structure and topology of this network has potential to uncover new materials knowledge inaccessible from the traditional bottom-up (atoms to materials) approaches. As an example, we derive a data-driven metric for the reactivity of a material as characterized by its connectedness in the network, and quantitatively identify the noblest materials in nature

    GĂŒĂ§ kaynakları ve otomotiv elektroniği uygulamaları için bor tabanlı kalın kesitli metalik cam / nanokristal manyetik malzemelerin geliƟtirilmesi

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    TÜBÄ°TAK MAG Proje01.06.2008This study is pertinent to setting a connection between glass forming ability (GFA) and topology of Fe-B based metallic glasses, identifying atomic effect order of elements increasing GFA and developing soft magnetic bulk metallic glasses (BMG) / bulk nanocrystalline alloys (BNCA) for industrial applications by combining intimate investigations on spatial atomic arrangements conducted via solid computer simulations with experimentations on high GFA bulk metallic glasses. In order to construct a theoretical framework, the nano-scale phase separation encountered in metallic glasses is investigated for amorphous Fe80B20 and Fe83B17 alloys via Monte Carlo and Reverse Monte Carlo simulations. All topological aspects revealed by developed analysis tools are compiled into a new model called Two-Dimensional Projection Model for predicting contributions to short and medium range order (MRO) and corresponding spacing relations. The outcome geometrically involves proportions approximating golden ratio. Soft magnetic Fe-Co-Nb-B-Si BMG and FeCo-Nb-B-Si-Cu BMG/BNCAs are produced with a totally conventional route, thermally characterized and their magnetic properties are measured. Influences of alloying elements that increase GFA and promote nanocristalization, on structural units and crystallization modes are identified by the developed model and radial distributions. While Co atoms substitute for Fe atoms, Nb and Si atoms deform trigonal prismatic units to provide local compactions at the outset of MRO. The GFA can be described by a new parameter quantifying the MRO compaction, cited as Ί. Moreover, after annealing Fe-Co-Nb-B-Si-Cu BMG alloy at 873 K for 300 s., the the precipitation is altered from Fe23B6 meta-sTablo phase to α-Fe nanocrystals, BNCAs are produced and this phenomenon is investigated structurally. It has been shown that developed Fe-B based BMGs and BNCAs show very good soft magnetic properties and optimum alloy composition is determined as (Fe36Co36B19.2Si4.8Nb4)99.25Cu0.75 with 3 mm thickness, 1.58 T saturation induction and 0.148 Oe coercivity

    Benchmarking the Acceleration of Materials Discovery by Sequential Learning

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    Sequential learning (SL) strategies, i.e. iteratively updating a machine learning model to guide experiments, have been proposed to significantly accelerate materials discovery and research. Applications on computational datasets and a handful of optimization experiments have demonstrated the promise of SL, motivating a quantitative evaluation of its ability to accelerate materials discovery, specifically in the case of physical experiments. The benchmarking effort in the present work quantifies the performance of SL algorithms with respect to a breadth of research goals: discovery of any “good” material, discovery of all “good” materials, and discovery of a model that accurately predicts the performance of new materials. To benchmark the effectiveness of different machine learning models against these goals, we use datasets in which the performance of all materials in the search space is known from high-throughput synthesis and electrochemistry experiments. Each dataset contains all pseudo-quaternary metal oxide combinations from a set of six elements (chemical space), the performance metric chosen is the electrocatalytic activity (overpotential) for the oxygen evolution reaction (OER). A diverse set of SL schemes is tested on four chemical spaces, each containing 2121 catalysts. The presented work suggests that research can be accelerated by up to a factor of 20 compared to random acquisition in specific scenarios. The results also show that certain choices of SL models are ill-suited for a given research goal resulting in substantial deceleration compared to random acquisition methods. The results provide quantitative guidance on how to tune an SL strategy for a given research goal and demonstrate the need for a new generation of materials-aware SL algorithms to further accelerate materials discovery
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