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Toward Designing Active ORR Catalysts via Interpretable and Explainable Machine Learning

The electrochemical oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) is a very important catalytic process that is directly used in carbon-free energy systems like fuel cells. However, the lack of active, stable, and cost-effective ORR cathode materials has been a major impediment to the broad adoption of these technologies. So, the challenge for researchers in catalysis is to find catalysts that are electrochemically efficient to drive the reaction, made of earth-abundant elements to lower material costs and allow scalability, and stable to make them last longer.
The majority of commercial catalysts that are now being used have been found through trial and error techniques that rely on the chemical intuition of experts. This method of empirical discovery is, however, very challenging, slow, and complicated because the performance of the catalyst depends on a myriad of factors. Researchers have recently turned to machine learning (ML) to find and design heterogeneous catalysts faster with emerging catalysis databases. Black-box models make up a lot of the ML models that are used in the field to predict the properties of catalysts that are important to their performance, such as their adsorption energies to reaction intermediates. However, as these black-box models are based on very complicated mathematical formulas, it is very hard to figure out how they work and the underlying physics of the desired catalyst properties remains hidden. As a way to open up these black boxes and make them easier to understand, more attention is being paid to interpretable and explainable ML. This work aims to speed up the process of screening and optimizing Pt monolayer alloys for ORR while gaining physical insights. We use a theory-infused machine learning framework in combination with a high-throughput active screening approach to effectively find promising ORR Pt monolayer catalysts. Furthermore, an explainability game-theory approach is employed to find electronic factors that control surface reactivity. The novel insights in this study can provide new design strategies that could shape the paradigm of catalyst discovery. / Doctor of Philosophy / The electrochemical oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) is a very important catalytic process that is used directly in carbon-free energy systems like fuel cells. But the lack of ORR cathode materials that are active, stable, and cheap has made it hard for these technologies to be widely used. Most of the commercially used catalysts have been found through trial-and-error methods that rely on the chemical intuition of experts. This method of finding out through experience is hard, slow, and complicated, though, because the performance of the catalyst depends on a variety of factors. Researchers are now using machine learning (ML) and new catalysis databases to find and design heterogeneous catalysts faster. But because black-box ML models are based on very complicated mathematical formulas, it is very hard to figure out how they work, and the physics behind the desired catalyst properties remains hidden.
In recent years, more attention has been paid to ML that can be understood and explained as a way to decode these "black boxes" and make them easier to understand. The goal of this work is to speed up the screening and optimization of Pt monolayer alloys for ORR. We find promising ORR Pt monolayer catalysts by using a machine learning framework that is based on theory and a high-throughput active screening method. A game-theory approach is also used to find the electronic factors that control surface reactivity. The new ideas in this study can lead to new ways of designing that could alter how researchers find catalysts.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:VTETD/oai:vtechworks.lib.vt.edu:10919/111972
Date22 September 2022
CreatorsOmidvar, Noushin
ContributorsChemical Engineering, Xin, Hongliang, Zhang, Sen, Zhu, Huiyuan, Achenie, Luke E.
PublisherVirginia Tech
Source SetsVirginia Tech Theses and Dissertation
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeDissertation
FormatETD, application/pdf
RightsIn Copyright, http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/

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