Catálogo de publicaciones - libros

Compartir en
redes sociales


Título de Acceso Abierto

Error-Correction Coding and Decoding: Bounds, Codes, Decoders, Analysis and Applications

Parte de: Signals and Communication Technology

Resumen/Descripción – provisto por la editorial

No disponible.

Palabras clave – provistas por la editorial

Coding; Communications; Engineering; Networks; Information Theory; Algorithms

Disponibilidad
Institución detectada Año de publicación Navegá Descargá Solicitá
No requiere 2018 Directory of Open access Books acceso abierto
No requiere 2018 SpringerLink acceso abierto

Información

Tipo de recurso:

libros

ISBN impreso

978-981-10-7616-9

ISBN electrónico

978-981-10-7617-6

Editor responsable

Springer Nature

País de edición

Reino Unido

Fecha de publicación

Cobertura temática

Tabla de contenidos

Descriptors for Machine Learning of Materials Data

Atsuto Seko; Atsushi Togo; Isao Tanaka

Descriptors, which are representations of compounds, play an essential role in machine learning of materials data. Although many representations of elements and structures of compounds are known, these representations are difficult to use as descriptors in their unchanged forms. This chapter shows how compounds in a dataset can be represented as descriptors and applied to machine-learning models for materials datasets.

Part I - Materials Informatics | Pp. 3-23

Potential Energy Surface Mapping of Charge Carriers in Ionic Conductors Based on a Gaussian Process Model

Kazuaki Toyoura; Ichiro Takeuchi

The potential energy surface (PES) of a charge carrier in a host crystal is an important concept to fundamentally understand ionic conduction. Such PES evaluations, especially by density functional theory (DFT) calculations, generally require vast computational costs. This chapter introduces a novel selective sampling procedure to preferentially evaluate the partial PES characterizing ionic conduction. This procedure is based on a machine learning method called the Gaussian process (GP), which reduces computational costs for PES evaluations. During the sampling procedure, a statistical model of the PES is constructed and sequentially updated to identify the characterizing ionic conduction in configuration space. Its efficacy is demonstrated using a model case of proton conduction in a well-known proton-conducting oxide, barium zirconate (BaZrO) with the cubic perovskite structure. The proposed procedure efficiently evaluates the partial PES in the region of interest that characterizes proton conduction in the host crystal lattice of BaZrO.

Part I - Materials Informatics | Pp. 25-44

Machine Learning Predictions of Factors Affecting the Activity of Heterogeneous Metal Catalysts

Ichigaku Takigawa; Ken-ichi Shimizu; Koji Tsuda; Satoru Takakusagi

The ultimate goal in heterogeneous catalytic science is to accurately predict trends in catalytic activity based on the electronic and geometric structures of active metal surfaces. Such predictions would allow the rational design of materials having specific catalytic functions without extensive trial-and-error experiments. The d-band center values of metals are well known to be an important parameter affecting the catalytic activity of these materials, and activity trends in metal surface catalyzed reactions can be explained based on the linear Brønsted–Evans–Polanyi relationship and the Hammer–Nørskov d-band model. The present work demonstrates the possibility of employing state-of-the-art machine learning methods to predict the d-band centers of metals and bimetals while using negligible CPU time compared to the more common first-principles approach.

Part I - Materials Informatics | Pp. 45-64

Machine Learning-Based Experimental Design in Materials Science

Thaer M. Dieb; Koji Tsuda

In materials design and discovery processes, optimal experimental design (OED) algorithms are getting more popular. OED is often modeled as an optimization of a black-box function. In this chapter, we introduce two machine learning-based approaches for OED: Bayesian optimization (BO) and Monte Carlo tree search (MCTS). BO is based on a relatively complex machine learning model and has been proven effective in a number of materials design problems. MCTS is a simpler and more efficient approach that showed significant success in the computer Go game. We discuss existing OED applications in materials science and discuss future directions.

Part I - Materials Informatics | Pp. 65-74

Persistent Homology and Materials Informatics

Mickaël Buchet; Yasuaki Hiraoka; Ippei Obayashi

This paper provides an introduction to persistent homology and a survey of its applications to materials science. Mathematical prerequisites are limited to elementary linear algebra. Important concepts in topological data analysis such as persistent homology and persistence diagram are explained in a self-contained manner with several examples. These tools are applied to glass structural analysis, crystallization of granular systems, and craze formation of polymers.

Part I - Materials Informatics | Pp. 75-95

Polyhedron and Polychoron Codes for Describing Atomic Arrangements

Kengo Nishio; Takehide Miyazaki

The arrangement of atoms can be represented as a tiling of Voronoi polyhedra by using the Voronoi tessellation. We can know how an atom is surrounded by its first nearest neighbour atoms by knowing the shape of the Voronoi polyhedron associated with that atom. Furthermore, by knowing how a Voronoi polyhedron is surrounded by other Voronoi polyhedra, we can know how an atom is surrounded by its first nearest neighbours, second nearest neighbours, third nearest neighbours, …. However, there existed no methods for describing the arrangements of polyhedra, or atomic arrangements. To overcome this problem, we have recently created the polyhedron and polychoron codes [Sci. Rep. 6, 23455, Sci. Rep. 7, 40269, and Bull. Soc. Sci. Form 32, 1 (2017)]. In this chapter, we review the methods.

Part I - Materials Informatics | Pp. 97-130

Topological Data Analysis for the Characterization of Atomic Scale Morphology from Atom Probe Tomography Images

Tianmu Zhang; Scott R. Broderick; Krishna Rajan

Atom probe tomography (APT) represents a revolutionary characterization tool for materials that combine atomic imaging with a time-of-flight (TOF) mass spectrometer to provide direct space three-dimensional, atomic scale resolution images of materials with the chemical identities of hundreds of millions of atoms. It involves the controlled removal of atoms from a specimen’s surface by field evaporation and then sequentially analyzing them with a position sensitive detector and TOF mass spectrometer. A paradox in APT is that while on the one hand, it provides an unprecedented level of imaging resolution in three dimensions, it is very difficult to obtain an accurate perspective of morphology or shape outlined by atoms of similar chemistry and microstructure. The origins of this problem are numerous, including incomplete detection of atoms and the complexity of the evaporation fields of atoms at or near interfaces. Hence, unlike scattering techniques such as electron microscopy, interfaces appear diffused, not sharp. This, in turn, makes it challenging to visualize and quantitatively interpret the microstructure at the “meso” scale, where one is interested in the shape and form of the interfaces and their associated chemical gradients. It is here that the application of informatics at the nanoscale and statistical learning methods plays a critical role in both defining the level of uncertainty and helping to make quantitative, statistically objective interpretations where heuristics often dominate. In this chapter, we show how the tools of Topological Data Analysis provide a new and powerful tool in the field of nanoinformatics for materials characterization.

Part II - Nanoscale Analyses and Informatics | Pp. 133-155

Atomic-Scale Nanostructures by Advanced Electron Microscopy and Informatics

Teruyasu Mizoguchi; Shin Kiyohara; Yuichi Ikuhara; Naoya Shibata

Interfaces dramatically affect the properties of materials because their atomic configurations often differ from the bulk material. A determination of the atomic structure of the interface is, therefore, one of the most significant tasks in materials research. Electron microscopy and theoretical calculations have been effectively used to accomplish this important task. In addition, an informatics approach has recently been combined with theoretical calculations to efficiently determine the atomic structures of interfaces. This chapter introduces the determination of interface structures using an informatics approach (Bayesian optimization and virtual screening) along with advanced electron microscopy. In the informatics approach, calculation acceleration on the order of 10 can be achieved. Determination of the interface structure with resolution better than ~45 pm is now possible using advanced electron microscopy. In this way, nanostructures at grain boundaries and heterointerfaces can be qualified. We will introduce these state of the art methods to investigate nanostructures.

Part II - Nanoscale Analyses and Informatics | Pp. 157-178

High Spatial Resolution Hyperspectral Imaging with Machine-Learning Techniques

Motoki Shiga; Shunsuke Muto

Recent advances in scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM) techniques have enabled us to obtain spectroscopic datasets such as those generated by electron energy-loss (EELS)/energy-dispersive X-ray (EDX) spectroscopy measurements in a PC-controlled way from a specified region of interest (ROI) even at atomic scale resolution, also known as hyperspectral imaging (HSI). Instead of conventional analytical procedures, in which the potential constituent chemical components are manually identified and the chemical state of each spectral component is successively determined, a statistical machine-learning approach, which is known to be more effective and efficient for the automatic resolution and extraction of the underlying chemical components stored in a huge three-dimensional array of an observed HSI dataset, is used. Among the statistical approaches suitable for processing HSI datasets, methods based on matrix factorization such as principal component analysis (PCA), multivariate curve resolution (MCR), and nonnegative matrix factorization (NMF) are useful to find an essential low-dimensional data subspace hidden in the HSI dataset. This chapter describes our developed NMF method, which has two additional terms in the objective function, and which is particularly effective for analyzing STEM-EELS/EDX HSI datasets: (i) a soft orthogonal penalty, which clearly resolves partially overlapped spectral components in their spatial distributions and (ii) an automatic relevance determination (ARD) prior, which optimizes the number of components involved in the observed data. Our analysis of real STEM-EELS/EDX HSI datasets demonstrates that the soft orthogonal penalty is effective to obtain the correct decomposition and that the ARD prior successfully identifies the correct number of physically meaningful components.

Part II - Nanoscale Analyses and Informatics | Pp. 179-203

Fabrication, Characterization, and Modulation of Functional Nanolayers

Hiromichi Ohta; Hidenori Hiramatsu

Regions of a few nanometers at the surface or interface of a material exhibit various functional properties, which differ from those of the bulk because the electrons and/or ions receive different potentials due to the incoherent atomic arrangement. High-quality epitaxial films of functional materials called “nanolayers” are important to utilize such functional properties. However, fabrication of high-quality nanolayers of complex materials with complicated crystal structures is usually challenging due to the difference in the thermochemical properties of the constituents. In this chapter, epitaxial growth techniques, especially “reactive solid-phase epitaxy” of functional oxides and chalcogenides, are reviewed based on the authors’ efforts. Additionally, this chapter reviews several modulation methods of optical, electrical, and magnetic properties of functional oxide nanolayers.

Part III - Materials Developments | Pp. 207-235