March 1, 2023
Journal Article

Artificial intelligence for materials research at extremes

Abstract

Materials development is slow and expensive, taking decades from inception to fielding. For materials research at extremes, the situation is even more demanding, as the desired property combinations such as strength and oxidation resistance can have complex interactions. Here, we explore the role of AI and autonomous experimentation (AE) in the process of understanding and developing materials for extreme and coupled environments. AI is important in understanding materials under extremes due to the highly demanding and unique cases these environments represent. Materials are pushed to their limits in ways that, for example, equilibrium phase diagrams cannot describe. Often, multiple physical phenomena compete to determine the material response. Further, validation is often difficult or impossible. AI can help bridge these gaps, providing heuristic but valuable links between materials properties and performance under extreme conditions. We explore the potential advantages of AE along with decision strategies. In particular, we consider the problem of deciding between low-fidelity, inexpensive experiments and high-fidelity, expensive experiments. The cost of experiments is described in terms of the speed and throughput of automated experiments, contrasted with the human resources needed to execute manual experiments. We also consider the cost and benefits of modeling and simulation to further materials understanding, along with characterization of materials under extreme environments in the AE loop.

Published: March 1, 2023

Citation

Maruyama B., J. Hattrick-Simpers, W. Musinski, L. Graham-Bradi, K. Li, J. Hollenbach, and A. Sing, et al. 2022. Artificial intelligence for materials research at extremes. MRS Bulletin 47, no. 11:1154-1164. PNNL-SA-181753. doi:10.1557/s43577-022-00466-4