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De Novo Design of Molecules with Low Hole Reorganization Energy Based on a Quarter-Million Molecule DFT Screen: Part 2.

Joshua StakerKyle MarshallKarl LeswingTim RobertsonMathew D HallsAlexander GoldbergTsuguo MorisatoHiroyuki MaeshimaTatsuhito AndoHideyuki AraiMasaru SasagoEiji FujiiNobuyuki N Matsuzawa
Published in: The journal of physical chemistry. A (2022)
Organic semiconductors have many desirable properties including improved manufacturing and flexible mechanical properties. Due to the vastness of chemical space, it is essential to efficiently explore chemical space when designing new materials, including through the use of generative techniques. New generative machine learning methods for molecular design continue to be published in the literature at a significant rate but successfully adapting methods to new chemistry and problem domains remains difficult. These challenges necessitate continual method evaluation to probe method viability for use in alternative applications not covered in the original works. In continuation of our previous work, we evaluate four additional machine-learning-based de novo methods for generating molecules with high predicted hole mobility for use in semiconductor applications. The four generative methods evaluated here are (1) Molecule Deep Q-Networks (MolDQN), which utilizes Deep-Q learning to directly optimize molecular structure graphs for desired properties instead of generating SMILES, (2) Graph-based Genetic Algorithm (GraphGA), which uses a genetic algorithm for optimization where crossovers and mutations are defined in terms of RDKit's reaction SMILES, (3) Generative Tensorial Reinforcement Learning (GENTRL), which is a variational autoencoder (VAE) with a learned prior distribution and optimized using reinforcement learning, and (4) Monte Carlo tree search exploration of chemical space in conjunction with a recurrent neural network (RNN) decoder (ChemTS). The generated molecules were evaluated using density functional theory (DFT) and we discovered better performing molecules with the GraphGA method compared to the other approaches.
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