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Atomistic simulations provide insights into structure-property relations on an atomic size and length scale, that are complementary to the macroscopic observables that can be obtained from experiments. Quantitative predictions, however, are usually hindered by the need to strike a balance between the accuracy of the calculation of the interatomic potential and the modeling of realistic thermodynamic conditions. Machine-learning techniques make it possible to efficiently approximate the outcome of accurate electronic-structure calculations, that can therefore be combined with extensive thermodynamic sampling. We take elemental nickel as a prototypical material, whose alloys have applications from cryogenic temperatures up to close to their melting point, and use it to demonstrate how a combination of machine-learning models of electronic properties and statistical sampling methods makes it possible to compute accurate finite-temperature properties at an affordable cost. We demonstrate the calculation of a broad array of bulk, interfacial, and defect properties over a temperature range from 100 to 2500 K, modeling also, when needed, the impact of nuclear quantum fluctuations and electronic excitations. The framework we demonstrate here can be easily generalized to more complex alloys and different classes of materials.
Michele Ceriotti, Guillaume André Jean Fraux, Sergey Pozdnyakov, Jigyasa Nigam
Nicola Marzari, Michele Simoncelli
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