Abstract
Overcoming the time scale limitations of atomistics can be achieved by switching from the state-space representation of Molecular Dynamics (MD) to a statistical-mechanics-based representation in phase space, where approximations such as maximum-entropy or Gaussian phase packets (GPP) evolve the atomistic ensemble in a time-coarsened fashion. In practice, this requires the computation of expensive high-dimensional integrals over all of phase space of an atomistic ensemble. This, in turn, is commonly accomplished efficiently by low-order numerical quadrature.
We show that numerical quadrature in this context, unfortunately, comes with a set of inherent problems, which corrupt the accuracy of simulations---especially when dealing with crystal lattices with imperfections. As a remedy, we demonstrate that Graph Neural Networks, trained on Monte-Carlo data, can serve as a replacement for commonly used numerical quadrature rules, overcoming their deficiencies and significantly improving the accuracy. This is showcased by three benchmarks: the thermal expansion of copper, the martensitic phase transition of iron, and the energy of grain boundaries. We illustrate the benefits of the proposed technique over classically used third- and fifth-order Gaussian quadrature, we highlight the impact on time-coarsened atomistic predictions, and we discuss the computational efficiency. The latter is of general importance when performing frequent evaluation of phase space or other high-dimensional integrals, which is why the proposed framework promises applications beyond the scope of atomistics. Show more
Permanent link
https://doi.org/10.3929/ethz-b-000612037Publication status
publishedExternal links
Journal / series
Mechanics of MaterialsVolume
Pages / Article No.
Publisher
ElsevierSubject
Atomistics; multiscale modeling; Graph Neural Networks (GNNs); statistical mechanicsOrganisational unit
09600 - Kochmann, Dennis / Kochmann, Dennis
Funding
770754 - Decoding the Mechanics of Metals by Coarse-Grained Atomistics (EC)
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