Machine Learning Applied to a Variable Charge Atomistic Model for Cu/Hf Binary Alloy Oxide Heterostructures

K Sasikumar and H Chan and B Narayanan and SKRS Sankaranarayanan, CHEMISTRY OF MATERIALS, 31, 3089-3102 (2019).

DOI: 10.1021/acs.chemmater.8b03969

Alloy oxide heterostructures are essential for a wide variety of energy applications, including anticorrosion coatings, bifunctional catalysis, energy storage, as well as emerging platforms for multilevel nonvolatile memory and neuromorphic devices. The key role played by oxide composition, density, and stoichiometry in governing electrochemical reactions, interface structure, and ionic transport in alloy oxides remains largely unknown. This is primarily due to the lack of variable charge interatomic potential models that can adequately describe the various atomic/ionic interactions in alloy oxides within a unified framework. Here, we introduce a charge transfer ionic potential (CTIP) model for Cu/Hf/O alloy system and demonstrate its ability to accurately capture the complex potential energy surface owing to dynamically varying interactions, including metallic (Cu/Hf), ionic (Cu/Hf/Ox), mixed environment (interfaces). We leverage supervised machine learning methods powered by genetic algorithms coupled with local simplex optimization to efficiently navigate through a high-dimensional parameter space and identify an optimum set of an independent set of CTIP parameters. We train our model against an extensive first- principles based data set that includes lattice constants, cohesive energies, equations of state, and elastic constants of various experimentally observed polymorphs of hafnia, copper oxide, hafnium, as well as copper. Our machine-learned CTIP model captures the structure, elastic properties, thermodynamics, and energetic ordering of various polyrnorphs. It also accurately predicts the surface properties of both oxides and their metals. To demonstrate the suitability of our CTIP model for investigating dynamic processes, we employed it to identify the atomistic scale mechanisms associated with the initial nanoscale oxidation and surface oxide growth on Cu-doped hafnia surfaces. Our machine-learned CTIP model can be used to probe the dynamic response of Cu/Hf/O alloy interfaces subjected to external stimuli (e.g., electric field, pressure, temperature, strain, etc.) and a variety of atomistic phenomena including the dynamics of switching in emerging neuromorphic platforms.

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