Vogiatzis Lab Published in Nature Communications
Machine learning applications for chemical problems have been rapidly increasing. Their popularity is justified since they have led to the discovery of new molecules and materials with enhanced properties, new reactions, or have contributed to the reduction of computational effort needed of complex calculations and simulations.
The Vogiatzis Lab seeks to address how a computational algorithm can efficiently “read” and “learn” patterns from molecular structures in their research “Representation of molecular structures with persistent homology for machine learning applications in chemistry” recently published in Nature Communications.
In this collaborative work between Jacob Townsend, John Hymel and Konstantinos Vogiatzis (Chemistry, University of Tennessee) and Cassie Micucci and Vasileios Maroulas (Mathematics, University of Tennessee), the group is presenting a novel molecular representation method based on persistent homology, an applied branch of topology, which encodes the atomistic structure of molecules.
A molecule is mapped into a persistence diagram, a two-dimensional point summary, which demystifies the connected components and the empty space that exist in a molecule based on the atom types and the distances among them. A persistence diagram is further vectorized to a persistence image (PI), a weighted representation of the diagram, which captures the chemically driven uncertainty. The PI in that sense is a “molecular fingerprint”, and when used with machine learning, offers an efficient and reliable approach to screen large molecular databases when compared to other popular molecular representation schemes.
The efficiency arises from the low computation effort needed to compare a large number of fingerprints, and the similar-size representations that are generated, independently of the molecular sizes.
The group demonstrates the applicability of the PI method by screening a large molecular database (GDB-9) with 133,885 organic molecules. Their target was to identify novel molecular units that selectively interact with CO2 and can be used as building blocks of materials, such as polymeric membranes.
They began their study by computing with density functional theory (DFT) the CO2 interaction energies of 100 organic molecules. “Since the initial, limited 100 data points were not capturing the diversity of the GDB-9 database, we applied a technique called active learning in order to incrementally obtain data which helped us efficiently screen the 133,885 molecules,” Vogiatzis said. “We found out that the combination of PIs with active learning performed well with data (interaction energies) from only 220 molecules in order to identify new molecules with stronger CO2 binding.”
Their data-driven methodology was able to identify molecular patterns previously unknown to us that increase the CO2 affinity of organic molecules.