On the Theoretical Optimization of Properties
Michael Springborg
Physical and Theoretical Chemistry, University of Saarland, 66123 Saarbrücken, Germany
EXTENDED ABSTRACT: During the last few decades, theoretical calculations have become of increasing importance in providing supporting and complementary information to what is provided by experiment. On the one side, such studies can help in the interpretation of experimental results and, on the other side, through such calculations a first screening of systems can be carried through, ultimately allowing for reducing the synthetic work in the lab. In all those cases, the conventional approach is to start with a realistic structure for the system of interest whose stoichiometry is known, subsequently let the system relax to a close structure of a local totalenergy minimum, and finally for this calculate the properties of interest. The situation is different when essentially nothing is known about the structure of the system of interest. This is, e.g., the case for clusters and nanoparticles. For such systems, specialized theoretical methods that aim at identifying the global total-energy minima have to be applied. Another challenge is to identify molecular systems with optimal properties without specifying the stoichiometry. In the present contribution we shall at first demonstrate how methods based on genetic algorithms can be used in optimizing the structure of nanoparticles. Subsequently, related methods will be used in identifying molecular systems with optimal properties, whereby at first, as a playground system, mixed Ge-Si clusters with optimal properties in solar-energy harvesting shall be identified. Subsequently, modified benzene and porphyrin molecules shall be treated. The purpose of this method, PooMa, is to provide useful information for experiments about interesting systems with predefined properties. It is based on many approximations and is not aimed at providing exact information on any detail. PooMa is developed as a simple, efficient method that does not rely on heavy computations or results from, e.g., high-throughput studies.
REFERENCES
[1] M. Springborg, S. Kohaut, Y. Dong, and K. Huwig: Mixed Si-Ge clusters, solar-energy harvesting, and
inverse-design methods, Comp. Theo. Chem. 1107 (2017) 14-22.
[2] K. Huwig, C. Fan, and M. Springborg: From properties to materials: an efficient and simple approach. J.
Chem. Phys. 147 (2017) 234105.
[3] C. Fan, M. Springborg, and Y. Feng: Application of an inverse-design method to optimizing porphyrins in
dye-sensitized solar cells. Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys. 21 (2019) 5834-5844.
[4] A. S. Khazaal, M. Springborg, C. Fan, and K. Huwig: Optimizing Small Conjugated Molecules for Solar-Cell
Applications Using an Inverse-Design Method. J. Mol. Graphics Model. 100 (2020) 107654 (12 pages).
[5] A. S. Khazaal, M. Springborg, C. Fan, and K. Huwig: Application of an inverse-design method for designing
new branched thiophene oligomers for bulk-heterojunction solar cells. Comp. Cond. Matt. 25 (2020) e00503 (11
pages)
Michael Springborg received his Ph.D from Technical University of Denmark in 1982. He is currently working as Full professor (C3) of Physical Chemistry at Universität des Saarlandes, D 66123 Saarbrücken, Federal Republic of Germany. Honours: 1995: Fellowship from Fonds der Chemischen Industrie; 2006: Fellow of the American Physical Society; 2008: Research Excellence Award of the ICCMSE 2008; 2010: Fellow of the Royal Society of Chemistry. Scientific output: In total, about 300 publications have resulted. Moreover, he has been a single or co-author of 4 textbooks, and (co-)editor of about 10 volumes of various series. In addition, he has been an organizer or co-organizer of about 15 symposia and scientific meetings, and has been supervising about 20 PhD students and a similar number of diploma and master students. Finally, he has given roughly 50 invited lectures at international conferences.