Physics student develops machine-learning model for energy and environmental applications

Physics student develops machine-learning model for energy and environmental applications

A West Virginia University physics student has created a new machine-learning model that has the potential to make searching for energy and environmental materials more efficient.

Gihan Panapitiya, a doctoral student from Sri Lanka, published a study in the Journal of the American Chemical Society using the model to predict the adsorption energies, or adhesive capabilities, in nanoparticles.

"Machine learning recently came into the spotlight, and we wanted to do something linking machine learning with gold nanoparticles as catalysts. When I was thinking about a research area, I found that predicting adsorption energies of this particle property is very hard, and the knowledge on adsorption energies is important for catalytic in , environmental and even ," Panapitiya said. "I thought if I could use machine learning to predict these adsorption energies without much difficulty, that would enable researchers to easily find nanoparticles with desired properties for a given application."

Featured on the cover of the December 19, 2018 issue of Journal of the American Chemical Society, Panapitiya and his co-authors used the geometric properties of gold, including the number of bonds and atoms, to test the model. They obtained an 80 percent accuracy prediction rate, the highest rate possible for machine-learning models calculating adsorption energies nanoparticles based only on geometric properties.

"We give the machine-learning algorithm completely unseen data so that if it is trained, it can recognize and find the energy only based on the features it has not seen," Panapitiya said. "By using just geometric properties, you don't have to do any calculations. That makes the prediction process very fast and easy to replicate."

They also tested the algorithm with different nanoparticle types and sizes to demonstrate that the model has the same prediction accuracy for any nanoparticle of any size and any shape.

"Gihan's significant research efforts have paid off in terms of truly amazing results, and deservedly so," said Professor of Physics James P. Lewis , Panapitiya's research adviser. "Gold-based bimetallic nanocatalysts provide greater tunability in nanostructures and chemical compositions that enable improvements in their reactivity, selectivity and stability to achieve the desired catalytic efficiencies. Correctly predicting their properties will drive technological advances."

Gold nanoparticles are commonly used as catalysts for energy and environmental applications and in biomedical applications like bioimaging and biolabeling.

"For example, gold nanoparticles can be used as fluorescent labels for biological imaging applications. Bioimaging is essential to understand the nature and the spread of a disease like cancer. When the human cancer cells are allowed to interact with , the get attached to cancer cells, which is called biolabeling," Panapitiya said. "After some time of attachment, the cancer cells emit luminescence, which can be collected to image these cancer cells."

More information: Gihan Panapitiya et al. Machine-Learning Prediction of CO Adsorption in Thiolated, Ag-Alloyed Au Nanoclusters, Journal of the American Chemical Society (2018). DOI: 10.1021/jacs.8b08800

Citation: Physics student develops machine-learning model for energy and environmental applications (2019, January 10) retrieved 18 April 2024 from https://phys.org/news/2019-01-physics-student-machine-learning-energy-environmental.html
This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.

Explore further

Understanding how small organic ions stabilize gold nanoparticles may allow for better control

54 shares

Feedback to editors