Predictive Atomistic Simulations of Materials using SNAP Data-Driven Potentials

ORAL

Abstract

Molecular dynamics (MD) is a powerful materials simulation method whose accuracy is limited by the interatomic potential (IAP). SNAP is an automated methodology for generating accurate and robust application-specific IAPs. SNAP is formulated in terms of a set of general four-body geometric invariants that characterize the local neighborhood of each atom. This approach has been used to develop potentials for diverse materials, including metals (Ta, W), metal alloys (AlNbTi), III-V semiconductors (InP), and plasma-facing materials (W/Be/He/H/N). Each SNAP IAP is trained on DFT calculations of energy, force, and stress for many small configurations of atoms. Cross-validation analysis and evaluation on test problems are used to further improve IAP fidelity and robustness. Varying the number of geometric descriptors allows a continuous tradeoff between computational cost and accuracy. The resultant potentials enable high-fidelity MD simulations of these materials, yielding insight into their behavior on lengthscales and timescales unreachable by other methods. The relatively large computational cost of SNAP is offset by combining LAMMPS' spatial parallel algorithms with Kokkos-based hierarchical multithreading, enabling the efficient use of Peta- to Exa-scale CPU and GPU platforms.

Presenters

  • Aidan Thompson

    • Sandia National Laboratories
    • Computational Multiscale, Sandia National Laboratories

Authors

  • Aidan Thompson

    • Sandia National Laboratories
    • Computational Multiscale, Sandia National Laboratories
  • Mitchell Wood

    • Sandia National Laboratories
    • Computational Multiscale, Sandia National Laboratories
  • Mary Alice Cusentino

    • Sandia National Laboratories
    • Computational Multiscale, Sandia National Laboratories
  • Julien Tranchida

    • Sandia National Laboratories
    • Computational Multiscale, Sandia National Laboratories
  • Nicholas Lubbers

    • Computer, Computational and Statistical Sciences, Information Sciences, Los Alamos National Laboratory
    • Computer Computational Statistical Sciences, Los Alamos National Laboratory
  • Stan Moore

    • Computational Multiscale, Sandia National Laboratories
  • Rahul Gayatri

    • Application Performance, NERSC, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory