Force-Field Optimization by End-to-End Differentiable Atomistic Simulation

AS Gangan and ED Cubuk and SS Schoenholz and M Bauchy and NMA Krishnan, JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL THEORY AND COMPUTATION, 21, 5867-5879 (2025).

DOI: 10.1021/acs.jctc.4c01784

The accuracy of atomistic simulations depends on the precision of the force fields. Traditional numerical methods often struggle to optimize the empirical force-field parameters for reproducing the target properties. Recent approaches rely on training these force fields based on forces and energies from first-principle simulations. However, it is unclear whether these approaches will enable the capture of complex material responses such as vibrational or elastic properties. To this extent, we introduce a framework employing inner loop simulations and outer loop optimization that exploits automatic differentiation for both property prediction and force-field optimization by computing gradients of the simulation analytically. We demonstrate the approach by optimizing classical potentials such as Stillinger-Weber and EDIP for silicon and BKS for SiO2 to reproduce properties like the elastic constants, vibrational density of states, and phonon dispersion. We also demonstrate how a machine-learned potential can be fine-tuned using automatic differentiation to reproduce any target property such as radial distribution functions. Interestingly, the resulting force field exhibits improved accuracy and generalizability to unseen temperatures compared to those fine-tuned on energies and forces. Finally, we demonstrate the extension of the approach to optimize the force fields toward multiple target properties. Altogether, differentiable simulations, through the analytical computation of their gradients, offer a powerful tool for both theoretical exploration and practical applications toward understanding physical systems and materials.

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