• About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact
HK Businesswire
  • Home
  • News
    • All
    • Business
    • Politics
    • PR Newswire
    • Science
    • World
    Xia Baolong concludes HK inspection

    Xia Baolong concludes HK inspection

    Iran deal ‘not final’, says Trump

    Seven Perfect Shuffles Randomize a Deck of Cards. But How Many Sloppy Ones?

    AXI SECURES FSC MAURITIUS LICENCE, BRINGING REGULATED TRADING TO THE WORLD’S FASTEST-GROWING MARKETS

    AXI SECURES FSC MAURITIUS LICENCE, BRINGING REGULATED TRADING TO THE WORLD’S FASTEST-GROWING MARKETS

    CE welcomes Hainan Governor

    CE welcomes Hainan Governor

    Man vs. Machine: 7th-Gen COFE+ Robotic Café Outperforms Elite Baristas in Historic Live Showdown

    Trending Tags

    • Trump Inauguration
    • United Stated
    • White House
    • Market Stories
    • Election Results
  • PR Newswire
  • Business
  • World
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Tech
    • All
    • Apps
    • Gadget
    • Mobile
    • Startup

    Alipay Launches AI-Powered Version ‘Abao’ to Streamline Services

    Xiaohongshu Prepares Confidential Hong Kong IPO Filing

    SpaceX Raises $75 Billion in Historic IPO Amid $350 Billion Investor Demand

    Chinese firms double down on tech: Xiaomi, Haier

    Xiaomi Launches MiMo Code AI Programming Assistant to Enter Coding Agent Market

    Apple Unveils Overhauled Siri AI and Major OS Updates at WWDC 2026

    OpenAI launches AI browser Atlas

    OpenAI Files Confidentially for IPO Amid Intensifying AI Competition

    Trending Tags

    • Nintendo Switch
    • CES 2017
    • Playstation 4 Pro
    • Mark Zuckerberg
  • Feature
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    • All
    • Business
    • Politics
    • PR Newswire
    • Science
    • World
    Xia Baolong concludes HK inspection

    Xia Baolong concludes HK inspection

    Iran deal ‘not final’, says Trump

    Seven Perfect Shuffles Randomize a Deck of Cards. But How Many Sloppy Ones?

    AXI SECURES FSC MAURITIUS LICENCE, BRINGING REGULATED TRADING TO THE WORLD’S FASTEST-GROWING MARKETS

    AXI SECURES FSC MAURITIUS LICENCE, BRINGING REGULATED TRADING TO THE WORLD’S FASTEST-GROWING MARKETS

    CE welcomes Hainan Governor

    CE welcomes Hainan Governor

    Man vs. Machine: 7th-Gen COFE+ Robotic Café Outperforms Elite Baristas in Historic Live Showdown

    Trending Tags

    • Trump Inauguration
    • United Stated
    • White House
    • Market Stories
    • Election Results
  • PR Newswire
  • Business
  • World
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Tech
    • All
    • Apps
    • Gadget
    • Mobile
    • Startup

    Alipay Launches AI-Powered Version ‘Abao’ to Streamline Services

    Xiaohongshu Prepares Confidential Hong Kong IPO Filing

    SpaceX Raises $75 Billion in Historic IPO Amid $350 Billion Investor Demand

    Chinese firms double down on tech: Xiaomi, Haier

    Xiaomi Launches MiMo Code AI Programming Assistant to Enter Coding Agent Market

    Apple Unveils Overhauled Siri AI and Major OS Updates at WWDC 2026

    OpenAI launches AI browser Atlas

    OpenAI Files Confidentially for IPO Amid Intensifying AI Competition

    Trending Tags

    • Nintendo Switch
    • CES 2017
    • Playstation 4 Pro
    • Mark Zuckerberg
  • Feature
No Result
View All Result
HK Businesswire
No Result
View All Result
Home News Science

New tool makes generative AI models more likely to create breakthrough materials

David Lee by David Lee
22 September 2025
in Science
0
New tool makes generative AI models more likely to create breakthrough materials
0
SHARES
2
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

The artificial intelligence models that turn text into images are also useful for generating new materials. Over the last few years, generative materials models from companies like Google, Microsoft, and Meta have drawn on their training data to help researchers design tens of millions of new materials.But when it comes to designing materials with exotic quantum properties like superconductivity or unique magnetic states, those models struggle. That’s too bad, because humans could use the help. For example, after a decade of research into a class of materials that could revolutionize quantum computing, called quantum spin liquids, only a dozen material candidates have been identified. The bottleneck means there are fewer materials to serve as the basis for technological breakthroughs.Now, MIT researchers have developed a technique that lets popular generative materials models create promising quantum materials by following specific design rules. The rules, or constraints, steer models to create materials with unique structures that give rise to quantum properties.“The models from these large companies generate materials optimized for stability,” says Mingda Li, MIT’s Class of 1947 Career Development Professor. “Our perspective is that’s not usually how materials science advances. We don’t need 10 million new materials to change the world. We just need one really good material.”The approach is described today in a paper published by Nature Materials. The researchers applied their technique to generate millions of candidate materials consisting of geometric lattice structures associated with quantum properties. From that pool, they synthesized two actual materials with exotic magnetic traits.“People in the quantum community really care about these geometric constraints, like the Kagome lattices that are two overlapping, upside-down triangles. We created materials with Kagome lattices because those materials can mimic the behavior of rare earth elements, so they are of high technical importance.” Li says.Li is the senior author of the paper. His MIT co-authors include PhD students Ryotaro Okabe, Mouyang Cheng, Abhijatmedhi Chotrattanapituk, and Denisse Cordova Carrizales; postdoc Manasi Mandal; undergraduate researchers Kiran Mak and Bowen Yu; visiting scholar Nguyen Tuan Hung; Xiang Fu ’22, PhD ’24; and professor of electrical engineering and computer science Tommi Jaakkola, who is an affiliate of the Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL) and Institute for Data, Systems, and Society. Additional co-authors include Yao Wang of Emory University, Weiwei Xie of Michigan State University, YQ Cheng of Oak Ridge National Laboratory, and Robert Cava of Princeton University.Steering models toward impactA material’s properties are determined by its structure, and quantum materials are no different. Certain atomic structures are more likely to give rise to exotic quantum properties than others. For instance, square lattices can serve as a platform for high-temperature superconductors, while other shapes known as Kagome and Lieb lattices can support the creation of materials that could be useful for quantum computing.To help a popular class of generative models known as a diffusion models produce materials that conform to particular geometric patterns, the researchers created SCIGEN (short for Structural Constraint Integration in GENerative model). SCIGEN is a computer code that ensures diffusion models adhere to user-defined constraints at each iterative generation step. With SCIGEN, users can give any generative AI diffusion model geometric structural rules to follow as it generates materials.AI diffusion models work by sampling from their training dataset to generate structures that reflect the distribution of structures found in the dataset. SCIGEN blocks generations that don’t align with the structural rules.To test SCIGEN, the researchers applied it to a popular AI materials generation model known as DiffCSP. They had the SCIGEN-equipped model generate materials with unique geometric patterns known as Archimedean lattices, which are collections of 2D lattice tilings of different polygons. Archimedean lattices can lead to a range of quantum phenomena and have been the focus of much research.“Archimedean lattices give rise to quantum spin liquids and so-called flat bands, which can mimic the properties of rare earths without rare earth elements, so they are extremely important,” says Cheng, a co-corresponding author of the work. “Other Archimedean lattice materials have large pores that could be used for carbon capture and other applications, so it’s a collection of special materials. In some cases, there are no known materials with that lattice, so I think it will be really interesting to find the first material that fits in that lattice.”The model generated over 10 million material candidates with Archimedean lattices. One million of those materials survived a screening for stability. Using the supercomputers in Oak Ridge National Laboratory, the researchers then took a smaller sample of 26,000 materials and ran detailed simulations to understand how the materials’ underlying atoms behaved. The researchers found magnetism in 41 percent of those structures.From that subset, the researchers synthesized two previously undiscovered compounds, TiPdBi and TiPbSb, at Xie and Cava’s labs. Subsequent experiments showed the AI model’s predictions largely aligned with the actual material’s properties.“We wanted to discover new materials that could have a huge potential impact by incorporating these structures that have been known to give rise to quantum properties,” says Okabe, the paper’s first author. “We already know that these materials with specific geometric patterns are interesting, so it’s natural to start with them.”Accelerating material breakthroughsQuantum spin liquids could unlock quantum computing by enabling stable, error-resistant qubits that serve as the basis of quantum operations. But no quantum spin liquid materials have been confirmed. Xie and Cava believe SCIGEN could accelerate the search for these materials.“There’s a big search for quantum computer materials and topological superconductors, and these are all related to the geometric patterns of materials,” Xie says. “But experimental progress has been very, very slow,” Cava adds. “Many of these quantum spin liquid materials are subject to constraints: They have to be in a triangular lattice or a Kagome lattice. If the materials satisfy those constraints, the quantum researchers get excited; it’s a necessary but not sufficient condition. So, by generating many, many materials like that, it immediately gives experimentalists hundreds or thousands more candidates to play with to accelerate quantum computer materials research.”“This work presents a new tool, leveraging machine learning, that can predict which materials will have specific elements in a desired geometric pattern,” says Drexel University Professor Steve May, who was not involved in the research. “This should speed up the development of previously unexplored materials for applications in next-generation electronic, magnetic, or optical technologies.”The researchers stress that experimentation is still critical to assess whether AI-generated materials can be synthesized and how their actual properties compare with model predictions. Future work on SCIGEN could incorporate additional design rules into generative models, including chemical and functional constraints.“People who want to change the world care about material properties more than the stability and structure of materials,” Okabe says. “With our approach, the ratio of stable materials goes down, but it opens the door to generate a whole bunch of promising materials.”The work was supported, in part, by the U.S. Department of Energy, the National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center, the National Science Foundation, and Oak Ridge National Laboratory.

Tags: Science
David Lee

David Lee

Read More

A better way to model the behavior of metal alloys

19 June 2026

MIT in the media: For the future of tech, “Massachusetts can absolutely lead”

18 June 2026
  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
Clarivate Releases Journal Citation Reports 2026

Clarivate Releases Journal Citation Reports 2026

17 June 2026

HKICPA Supports Government Plan to Boost Corporate Treasury Centres in Hong Kong

12 June 2026
Jabs urged as doctors fear flu season overlap

Ping An Good Doctor Upgrades AI Health Service to Cover 90 Million Monthly Users

17 June 2026

Fluorescent nanosensor enables rapid, first-of-its-kind detection of key gut health biomarker

15 June 2026
Xia Baolong concludes HK inspection

Xia Baolong concludes HK inspection

17 June 2026

Iran deal ‘not final’, says Trump

17 June 2026

Seven Perfect Shuffles Randomize a Deck of Cards. But How Many Sloppy Ones?

17 June 2026
AXI SECURES FSC MAURITIUS LICENCE, BRINGING REGULATED TRADING TO THE WORLD’S FASTEST-GROWING MARKETS

AXI SECURES FSC MAURITIUS LICENCE, BRINGING REGULATED TRADING TO THE WORLD’S FASTEST-GROWING MARKETS

17 June 2026

Recent News

Xia Baolong concludes HK inspection

Xia Baolong concludes HK inspection

17 June 2026

Iran deal ‘not final’, says Trump

17 June 2026

Seven Perfect Shuffles Randomize a Deck of Cards. But How Many Sloppy Ones?

17 June 2026
AXI SECURES FSC MAURITIUS LICENCE, BRINGING REGULATED TRADING TO THE WORLD’S FASTEST-GROWING MARKETS

AXI SECURES FSC MAURITIUS LICENCE, BRINGING REGULATED TRADING TO THE WORLD’S FASTEST-GROWING MARKETS

17 June 2026
HK Businesswire

Stay ahead with the latest insights on Hong Kong’s economy, finance, and investments. From market trends to policy updates, we bring you in-depth analysis and expert opinions.

📩 Subscribe to our newsletter for exclusive updates.
📍 Follow us on social media for real-time news.
📧 Contact us: info@hongkong-invest.com

Follow Us

  • About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact

© 2025 by HKBusinesswire.com

No Result
View All Result

© 2025 by HKBusinesswire.com