Predicting self-diffusion coefficients of small molecular fluids using machine 2 learning and the statistical associating fluid theory for Mie segments
Identificadores
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/10481/98413Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemEditorial
American Institute of Physics
Materia
Machine learning Mie fluids Molecular Dynamics
Fecha
2024Referencia bibliográfica
Physics of Fluids, accepted manuscript
Patrocinador
UK Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) through an Industrial Cooperative Award in Science & Technology (ICASE) co-funded by IBM, project ID 2327699 - EP/T517689/1; MICIU/AEI/10.13039/501100011033 and ERDF A way of making Europe (grant PID2022-136540NB-I00); Andalucía - Consejería de Universidad, Investigación e Innovación (grant P21_00015); NextGenerationEU/PRTR (María Zambrano Senior fellowship)Resumen
In our previous work [J. Chem. Phys. 159, 024127 (2023)], we applied three Machine Learning (ML) models to predict the self-diffusion coefficient of spherical particles interacting via the Mie potential. Here, we introduce an optimization approach using the
so-called Statistical Associating Fluid Theory for Mie segments (SAFT-VR Mie) and available vapor-liquid equilibria data to obtain molecular parameters for both Mie and LennardJones potentials to describe the diffusion coefficient of 16 molecules described as a single sphere. Our ML models utilize these molecular parameters to predict the self-diffusion of these molecules. We conduct a comparative analysis between the molecular parameters derived from our thermodynamic approach and those obtained through direct fitting of the experimental self-diffusion coefficients. Our findings indicate that the predictive accuracy remains largely unaffected by the specific repulsive and attractive exponents of the Mie potential employed, provided that the fitting of the molecular parameters is precise. The Mie parameters obtained within a thermodynamic framework exhibit a higher coefficient of determination (R2) and absolute average relative deviation (AARD) values compared to those derived from molecular parameters derived from fitting the self-diffusion coefficient, indicating their superior precision at higher values of the self-diffusion coefficient. Despite this
discrepancy, the overall precision of both methodologies remains comparable. Given the abundance of precise thermodynamic data in contrast to self-diffusion data, we advocate the thermodynamic fitting approach as the preferred method for acquiring accurate Mie
coefficients, essential to predict self-diffusion coefficients with ML and semi-empirical models.