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Journal Article

Electronic-Structure Properties from Atom-Centered Predictions of the Electron Density

MPS-Authors
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Lewis,  A.
Simulations from Ab Initio Approaches, Theory Department, Max Planck Institute for the Structure and Dynamics of Matter, Max Planck Society;

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Rossi,  M.
Simulations from Ab Initio Approaches, Theory Department, Max Planck Institute for the Structure and Dynamics of Matter, Max Planck Society;

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2206.14087.pdf
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ct2c00850_si_001.pdf
(Supplementary material), 189KB

Citation

Grisafi, A., Lewis, A., Rossi, M., & Ceriotti, M. (2023). Electronic-Structure Properties from Atom-Centered Predictions of the Electron Density. Journal of Chemical Theory and Computation, 19(14), 4335-4780. doi:10.1021/acs.jctc.2c00850.


Cite as: https://hdl.handle.net/21.11116/0000-000A-B769-2
Abstract
The electron density of a molecule or material has recently received major attention as a target quantity of machine-learning models. A natural choice to construct a model that yields transferable and linear-scaling predictions is to represent the scalar field using a multicentered atomic basis analogous to that routinely used in density fitting approximations. However, the nonorthogonality of the basis poses challenges for the learning exercise, as it requires accounting for all the atomic density components at once. We devise a gradient-based approach to directly minimize the loss function of the regression problem in an optimized and highly sparse feature space. In so doing, we overcome the limitations associated with adopting an atom-centered model to learn the electron density over arbitrarily complex data sets, obtaining very accurate predictions using a comparatively small training set. The enhanced framework is tested on 32-molecule periodic cells of liquid water, presenting enough complexity to require an optimal balance between accuracy and computational efficiency. We show that starting from the predicted density a single Kohn–Sham diagonalization step can be performed to access total energy components that carry an error of just 0.1 meV/atom with respect to the reference density functional calculations. Finally, we test our method on the highly heterogeneous QM9 benchmark data set, showing that a small fraction of the training data is enough to derive ground-state total energies within chemical accuracy.