Bulletin of the American Physical Society
2024 APS March Meeting
Monday–Friday, March 4–8, 2024; Minneapolis & Virtual
Session B02: The NSF Mathematical Sciences Institutes: Physicists Collaborating with Mathematicians on Major Societal Challenges
11:30 AM–2:30 PM,
Monday, March 4, 2024
Room: L100B
Sponsoring
Units:
DCOMP FPS
Chair: Philip Hammer, University of Chicago
Abstract: B02.00002 : Invited Talk: Danny PerezTitle: Automated data-driven upscaling of transport properties in materials: the results of a multidisciplinary collaboration between physics and mathematics
12:06 PM–12:42 PM
Presenter:
Danny Perez
(Los Alamos National Laboratory)
Author:
Danny Perez
(Los Alamos National Laboratory)
applications. Characterizing the transport of complex defects is however notoriously tedious and time-consuming, especially as the defects grow, leading to a combinatorial explosion in the number of possible conformations and local transition pathways. I will present a large-scale data-driven approach to automatically obtain reduced-order models of defect evolution, transport coefficients, as well as effective continuum transport equations, from large number of short molecular dynamics (MD) simulations. The optimal MD simulations to carry out are identified on-the-fly using a Bayesian uncertainty quantification framework and automatically executed on a massively-parallel task-execution infrastructure. We show how this microscopic information can be systematically and efficiently upscaled into meso and macro-scale representations that can inform microstructure evolution models. Throughout this talk, I will show how the multidisciplinary environment provided by NSF math institutes such as IPAM and IMSI was instrumental in the development of the solid mathematical foundations that enabled these advances in computational materials physics.
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