4.6 Article

Exploration of Solid Solutions and the Strengthening of Aluminum Substrates by Alloying Atoms: Machine Learning Accelerated Density Functional Theory Calculations

Journal

MATERIALS
Volume 16, Issue 20, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ma16206757

Keywords

aluminum substrate; single atoms; mechanical properties; explainable machine learning; density function theory

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The effects of alloying atoms on the stability and micromechanical properties of aluminum alloy were studied using a machine learning accelerated first-principles approach. It was found that certain alloy atoms exert a strengthening influence, providing theoretical guidance for selecting suitable alloy elements.
In this paper, we studied the effects of a series of alloying atoms on the stability and micromechanical properties of aluminum alloy using a machine learning accelerated first-principles approach. In our preliminary work, high-throughput first-principles calculations were explored and the solution energy and theoretical stress of atomically doped aluminum substrates were extracted as basic data. By comparing five different algorithms, we found that the Catboost model had the lowest RMSE (0.24) and lowest MAPE (6.34), and this was used as the final prediction model to predict the solid solution strengthening of the aluminum matrix by the elements. Calculations show that alloying atoms such as K, Na, Y and Tl are difficult to dissolve in the aluminum matrix, whereas alloy atoms like Sc, Cu, B, Zr, Ni, Ti, Nb, V, Cr, Mn, Mo, and W exerted a strengthening influence. Theoretical studies on solid solutions and the strengthening effect of various alloy atoms in an aluminum matrix can offer theoretical guidance for the subsequent selection of suitable alloy elements. The theoretical investigation of alloy atoms in an aluminum matrix unveils the fundamental aspects of the solution strengthening effect, contributing significantly to the expedited development of new aluminum alloys.

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