4.7 Article

Deep learning approach for chemistry and processing history prediction from materials microstructure

Journal

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
Volume 12, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-022-08484-7

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Boise State University
  2. Idaho NASA EPSCoR
  3. National Science Foundation [ACI-1548562]
  4. Boise State University's Research Computing Department

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This study proposes a deep learning approach to predict the chemistry and processing history of heterogeneous materials based on morphological distribution. A case study on Fe-Cr-Co alloy using phase-field method simulation dataset is conducted. The results show that a shallow network is effective in predicting chemistry, while accurate prediction of processing temperature requires more complex feature extraction from microstructure morphology.
Finding the chemical composition and processing history from a microstructure morphology for heterogeneous materials is desired in many applications. While the simulation methods based on physical concepts such as the phase-field method can predict the spatio-temporal evolution of the materials' microstructure, they are not efficient techniques for predicting processing and chemistry if a specific morphology is desired. In this study, we propose a framework based on a deep learning approach that enables us to predict the chemistry and processing history just by reading the morphological distribution of one element. As a case study, we used a dataset from spinodal decomposition simulation of Fe-Cr-Co alloy created by the phase-field method. The mixed dataset, which includes both images, i.e., the morphology of Fe distribution, and continuous data, i.e., the Fe minimum and maximum concentration in the microstructures, are used as input data, and the spinodal temperature and initial chemical composition are utilized as the output data to train the proposed deep neural network. The proposed convolutional layers were compared with pretrained EfficientNet convolutional layers as transfer learning in microstructure feature extraction. The results show that the trained shallow network is effective for chemistry prediction. However, accurate prediction of processing temperature requires more complex feature extraction from the morphology of the microstructure. We benchmarked the model predictive accuracy for real alloy systems with a Fe-Cr-Co transmission electron microscopy micrograph. The predicted chemistry and heat treatment temperature were in good agreement with the ground truth.

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