An unsupervised data mining methodology for analysis of molecular dynamics sampling of local coordination

ORAL

Abstract

Molecular dynamics (MD) simulations present a data-mining challenge, given that they can generate a considerable amount of data but often rely on limited or biased human interpretation to examine their information content. By not asking the right questions of MD data we may miss critical information hidden within it. We combine dimensionality reduction (UMAP) and unsupervised hierarchical clustering (HDBSCAN) to quantitatively characterize the coordination environment of chemical species within MD data. By focusing on local coordination, we significantly reduce the amount of data to be analyzed by extracting all distinct molecular formulas within a given coordination sphere. We then efficiently combine UMAP and HDBSCAN with alignment or shape-matching algorithms to classify these formulas into distinct structural isomer families. The outcome is a quantitative mapping of the multiple coordination environments present in the MD data. The method was employed to reveal details of cation coordination in electrolytes based on molecular liquids and polymers.

The tool is written in python, leverages available open-source data science modules and integrates with the Atomic Simulation Environment (ASE).

*This work was supported by the Joint Center for Energy Storage Research (JCESR), an Energy Innovation Hub funded by the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE). Simulations and theoretical analysis were executed as part of a user project at the Molecular Foundry, supported by the Office of Science, Office of Basic Energy Sciences, of the U.S. DOE under Contract No. DE-AC02-05CH11231.

Presenters

  • Fabrice Roncoroni

    • Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
    • Lawrence Berkeley National lab

Authors

  • Fabrice Roncoroni

    • Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
    • Lawrence Berkeley National lab
  • Ana Sanz Matias

    • Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
  • Siddharth Sundarararaman

    • Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
  • David Prendergast

    • Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory