Multi-objective goal-directed optimization of de novo stable organic radicals for aqueous redox flow batteries

Advances in the field of goal-directed molecular optimization offer the promise of finding feasible candidates for even the most challenging molecular design applications. One example of a fundamental design challenge is the search for novel stable radical scaffolds for an aqueous redox flow battery...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature machine intelligence 2022-08, Vol.4 (8), p.720-730
Hauptverfasser: S. V., Shree Sowndarya, Law, Jeffrey N., Tripp, Charles E., Duplyakin, Dmitry, Skordilis, Erotokritos, Biagioni, David, Paton, Robert S., St. John, Peter C.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Advances in the field of goal-directed molecular optimization offer the promise of finding feasible candidates for even the most challenging molecular design applications. One example of a fundamental design challenge is the search for novel stable radical scaffolds for an aqueous redox flow battery that simultaneously satisfy redox requirements at the anode and cathode, as relatively few stable organic radicals are known to exist. To meet this challenge, we develop a new open-source molecular optimization framework based on AlphaZero coupled with a fast, machine-learning-derived surrogate objective trained with nearly 100,000 quantum chemistry simulations. The objective function comprises two graph neural networks: one that predicts adiabatic oxidation and reduction potentials and a second that predicts electron density and local three-dimensional environment, previously shown to be correlated with radical persistence and stability. With no hard-coded knowledge of organic chemistry, the reinforcement learning agent finds molecule candidates that satisfy a precise combination of redox, stability and synthesizability requirements defined at the quantum chemistry level, many of which have reasonable predicted retrosynthetic pathways. The optimized molecules show that alternative stable radical scaffolds may offer a unique profile of stability and redox potentials to enable low-cost symmetric aqueous redox flow batteries. Finding stable radical compounds for redox flow batteries is a challenging molecular design task. Sowndarya et al. combine an AlphaZero-based framework with a surrogate objective function trained on quantum chemistry simulations to generate suitable radical candidates that are stable. The approach promises to contribute to the development of low-cost, reliable energy storage technologies.
ISSN:2522-5839
2522-5839
DOI:10.1038/s42256-022-00506-3