Breadcrumb
- Home
- Publications
- Proceedings
- 2023 AIChE Annual Meeting
- Computing and Systems Technology Division
- Interactive Session: Systems and Process Design
- (60e) Physics-Guided Autonomous Design for Acid-Stable Water Oxidation Catalyst
In our preliminary research, we tried to design the catalyst for acid oxygen evolution reaction (OER) in bimetallic system using multi-objective Bayesian optimization (MOBO) 4. An optimal catalyst composition that improves both current density and residual density fraction, two objective functions that are indicators of catalyst activity and stability, was proposed. As a result, the current density increased by 7.77 mA cm-2 and the residual density fraction increased by 13% compared to the pure Ir-based catalyst. We extend the methodology of preliminary research and search for the trimetallic catalyst with ideal catalytic performance. However, as the number of alloying elements increases, the component exploration space expands, resulting in significant computational cost and an increase in the number of experiments to be performed. Therefore, we intend to develop a new methodology in which physical information such as first-principles calculations (density functional theory) is used to guide the optimization mechanism.
Here, we introduce the physics-guided autonomous discovery methodology by applying the DFT fidelity model to the BO-based optimal experimental design and present the Ir-Mo-Ni trimetallic acid stable OER catalyst. In contrast to previous studies, we add a fidelity function related to the two objective functions, perform the evaluation in two steps using an acquisition function, and approximate black-box functions with different fidelities. This allows us to efficiently search the composition space of a wide range of catalysts and reduce the number of experiments required for composition optimization. We expect to find more active and stable catalysts using the DFT-BO method than by using experimental data alone. Finally, when the physical information of materials can be roughly known in advance, as in DFT calculations, this method can be applied in many chemical fields as a generalization of physics-based BO.
References