Bulletin of the American Physical Society
APS March Meeting 2021
Volume 66, Number 1
Monday–Friday, March 15–19, 2021; Virtual; Time Zone: Central Daylight Time, USA
Session Y61: Deep Learning for Spectroscopy
11:30 AM–2:30 PM,
Friday, March 19, 2021
Sponsoring
Units:
GDS DCOMP
Chair: Cheng-Chien Chen, Univ of Alabama at Birmingham; William Ratcliff, National Institute of Standards and Technology
Abstract: Y61.00008 : AI assisted analysis of x-ray spectra
1:18 PM–1:54 PM
Live
Presenter:
Santosh Suram
(Toyota Research Institute)
Authors:
Santosh Suram
(Toyota Research Institute)
Steven Torrisi
(Department of Physics, Harvard University)
Linda Hung
(Toyota Research Institute)
Matthew R Carbone
(Columbia University)
John Gregoire
(California Institute of Technology)
Carla Gomes
(Cornell University)
Junko Yano
(Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory)
X-ray diffraction is critical to examine crystal structure of the material synthesized and also acts as a link between experiment and theory. In recent years, high-throughput measurement of x-ray diffraction has given us large volumes of data that are challenging to analyze. We show that by using physical constraints, matrix factorization, and introducing known knowledge we can rapidly map out quternary phase diagrams from experimental data.
X-ray absorption spectra are criticial to capture local chemical information of a material which are of great importance for functional properties such as catalysis, photocatalysis, battery electrodes etc. However, intepretation of these spectra is very time consuming and automated interpretation is likely to help maximize the use of expensive synchrotron resources. By combining random-forest and physically meaningful featurizations we show that we can automatically capture coordination number, bader charge, and nearest neighbor distances.
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