Machine learning and molecular descriptors enable rational solvent selection in asymmetric catalysis.
Yehia AmarArtur M SchweidtmannPaul DeutschLiwei CaoAlexei A LapkinPublished in: Chemical science (2019)
Rational solvent selection remains a significant challenge in process development. Here we describe a hybrid mechanistic-machine learning approach, geared towards automated process development workflow. A library of 459 solvents was used, for which 12 conventional molecular descriptors, two reaction-specific descriptors, and additional descriptors based on screening charge density, were calculated. Gaussian process surrogate models were trained on experimental data from a Rh(CO)2(acac)/Josiphos catalysed asymmetric hydrogenation of a chiral α-β unsaturated γ-lactam. With two simultaneous objectives - high conversion and high diastereomeric excess - the multi-objective algorithm, trained on the initial dataset of 25 solvents, has identified solvents leading to better reaction outcomes. In addition to being a powerful design of experiments (DoE) methodology, the resulting Gaussian process surrogate model for conversion is, in statistical terms, predictive, with a cross-validation correlation coefficient of 0.84. After identifying promising solvents, the composition of solvent mixtures and optimal reaction temperature were found using a black-box Bayesian optimisation. We then demonstrated the application of a new genetic programming approach to select an appropriate machine learning model for a specific physical system, which should allow the transition of the overall process development workflow into the future robotic laboratories.
Keyphrases
- machine learning
- ionic liquid
- big data
- artificial intelligence
- deep learning
- electronic health record
- physical activity
- gene expression
- magnetic resonance imaging
- resistance training
- type diabetes
- metabolic syndrome
- current status
- skeletal muscle
- minimally invasive
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- binding protein
- genome wide
- body composition
- single molecule
- weight loss
- dna methylation
- robot assisted
- electron transfer