Scientists Suggest Using Machine Learning to Predict Materials' Properties

Peter the Great St.Petersburg Polytechnic University

Using Machine Learning to Predict Materials' Properties

Researchers suggest using machine learning methods to predict the properties of artificial sapphire crystals

Written byPeter the Great Saint-Petersburg Polytechnic University
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Researchers suggested using machine learning methods to predict the properties of artificial sapphire crystals—a unique material widely used in microelectronics, optics, and electronics.
Peter the Great St.Petersburg Polytechnic University

Researchers from Peter the Great St.Petersburg Polytechnic University (SPbPU) in collaboration with colleagues from Southern Federal University and Indian Institute of Technology-Madras (IIT Madras) suggest using machine learning methods to predict the properties of artificial sapphire crystals. These crystals are a unique material widely used in microelectronics, optics, and electronics. The results of the study were published in the Journal of Electronic Science and Technology and the illustration from the article was used on the cover of the journal.

Machine learning methods are becoming increasingly popular in accelerating the design of new materials by predicting material properties. The minimization of various defects in the crystal structure is extremely important for the improvement and development of modern technologies for artificial sapphire crystal growth.

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Scientists note that the purpose of the study is to reduce various defects in sapphire crystals, improve, and develop modern technologies for growing artificial crystals.


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"Our research team obtained the models of crystal growth parameters' influence on sapphire crystal growth. We developed the software which is considered to be a universal tool for studying the influence of various parameters on the quality of crystals. It can be widely used to assess and predict the defects in a growing crystal," said Alexey Filimonov, professor of the Higher Engineering Physics School at Peter the Great St. Petersburg Polytechnic University (SPbPU).

Julia Klunnikova, associate professor at Southern Federal University (SFU), adds: "We use the scheme where the predictive modules are developed separately using the Orange Canvas data mining tool. For the decision support system, our group developed a special software for analyzing the quality of the resulting crystals, which allows optimizing the process of crystal growth."

Ravi Kumar, head of the Laboratory for High Performance Ceramics and professor in the Department of Metallurgical and Materials Engineering at the Indian Institute of Technology-Madras (IIT Madras), is confident that the industrial application of such methods will heighten the automatization level of production of crystals with a predefined combination of properties that can be important for a particular application in micro- and nanoelectronics. The solution of these scientific and engineering problems assumes the use of information technologies in production of crystals at a new level.

Currently, the team of authors is working to increase the number of experimental data, which will provide new opportunities for prediction and increase its accuracy. It is planned to recognize crystal images from the furnace chamber and to forecast the conditions' influence on crystal quality.

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