Crash Testing Machine Learning Force Fields for Molecules, Materials, and Interfaces: Model Analysis in the TEA Challenge 2023

27 September 2024, Version 1

Abstract

Atomistic simulations are routinely employed in academia and industry to study the behavior of molecules, materials, and their interfaces. Central to these simulations are force fields (FF), whose development is challenged by intricate interatomic interactions at different spatio-temporal scales and the vast expanse of chemical space. Machine learning (ML) FFs, trained on quantum-mechanical energies and forces, have shown the capacity to achieve sub-kcal/(mol*A) accuracy while maintaining computational efficiency. The TEA Challenge 2023 rigorously evaluated commonly used MLFFs across diverse applications, highlighting their strengths and weaknesses. Participants trained their models using provided datasets, and the results were systematically analyzed to assess the MLFFs' ability to reproduce potential energy surfaces, handle incomplete reference data, manage multi-component systems, and model complex periodic structures. This publication describes the datasets, outlines the proposed challenges, and presents a detailed analysis of the accuracy, stability, and efficiency of the MACE, SO3krates, sGDML, SOAP/GAP, and FCHL19* architectures in molecular dynamics simulations. The models represent the MLFF developers who participated in the TEA Challenge 2023. All results presented correspond to the state of the ML architectures as of October 2023. A comprehensive analysis of the molecular dynamics results obtained with different MLFFs will be presented in the second part of this manuscript.

Keywords

Machine Learning
Force Fields
Atomistic Simulations
Molecular Dynamics

Supplementary materials

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Title
SI: Crash Testing Machine Learning Force Fields for Molecules, Materials, and Interfaces: Model Analysis in the TEA Challenge 2023
Description
Details on the methods used in the TEA Challenge 2023 can be found in this SI, as well as an outline and explanation of the warm dense Hydrogen benchmark dataset. Further, figures depicting the atomic force MAEs for Challenge I and the maximum force prediction errors for Challenges I - III are presented here. The performance of the retrained SO3krates model for Challenge III is also shown. Finally, full tables with the normalised errors on the test sets obtained in all the tasks for all the models are available.
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