4.7 Article

A neural network potential with self-trained atomic fingerprints: A test with the mW water potential

Journal

JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL PHYSICS
Volume 158, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

AIP Publishing
DOI: 10.1063/5.0139245

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We propose a new neural network potential that incorporates atomic fingerprints based on both two- and three-body contributions. These fingerprints probe distances and local orientational order. The training process of the proposed potential is simplified by using a small set of tunable parameters for the fingerprints. This approach improves the overall accuracy of the network representation and successfully reproduces the behavior of the mW model of water.
We present a neural network (NN) potential based on a new set of atomic fingerprints built upon two- and three-body contributions that probe distances and local orientational order, respectively. Compared with the existing NN potentials, the atomic fingerprints depend on a small set of tunable parameters that are trained together with the NN weights. In addition to simplifying the selection of the atomic fingerprints, this strategy can also considerably increase the overall accuracy of the network representation. To tackle the simultaneous training of the atomic fingerprint parameters and NN weights, we adopt an annealing protocol that progressively cycles the learning rate, significantly improving the accuracy of the NN potential. We test the performance of the network potential against the mW model of water, which is a classical three-body potential that well captures the anomalies of the liquid phase. Trained on just three state points, the NN potential is able to reproduce the mW model in a very wide range of densities and temperatures, from negative pressures to several GPa, capturing the transition from an open random tetrahedral network to a dense interpenetrated network. The NN potential also reproduces very well properties for which it was not explicitly trained, such as dynamical properties and the structure of the stable crystalline phases of mW.

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