Symposium DS05-Polymer Informatics—Polymer Research with Classical and Data-Driven Informatics

Today’s grand challenges of the polymer community are to improve polymer technologies and deployment faster and more cost efficient than before. Design and discovery strategies of the nascent field of polymer informatics are instrumental to overcome this challenge. Big data and classical modeling are only beginning to impact polymer research and industry but have shown that they act as the shining beacon for many future discoveries.

This symposium focuses on innovative methods for polymer data generation, data curation, knowledge discovery, property predictions, and intelligent design as well as synthesis for pure polymers, polymer blends, and formulations. The purpose of this symposium is to bring together materials scientists/engineers, chemists, physicists, and computer scientists across academia and industry to discuss current and future informatics efforts that advance polymer research. The scope of the discussion includes state-of-the-art methods, recent progress, and cutting edge approaches in classical and data-driven informatics. Potential classical methods include but are not limited to numerical approaches for differential equations, monte carlo simulations, molecular dynamics, and density functional theory. Data-driven approaches include all machine learning methods ranging from more traditional methods such as kernel ridgid, gaussian processes, and random forests to sophisticated neural networks architectures such as variational autoencoder, transformers, physics- or chemistry-informed models, or reinforcement learning.

Topics will include:

  • Strategies for polymer chemical space exploration
  • Polymer representations (fingerprints or descriptors) for informatics-based method
  • High-throughput screening and experiments
  • Length and time scale bridging with informatics
  • Knowledge discovery and rule mining
  • Numerical methods and algorithms for efficient data mining
  • Prediction strategies using machine learning
  • Uncertainty quantification
  • Advanced machine learning methods
  • Data extraction, organization and sharing
  • Synthesis planning
  • Autonomous polymer design
  • Novel/Faster methods to compute polymer properties
  • Active learning and polymer discovery

Invited Speakers (tentative):

  • Andrea Browning (Schrödinger, LLC., USA, USA)
  • Adam Gormley (Rutgers University, USA)
  • Kurt Kremer (Max Planck Institute for Polymer Research, Germany)
  • Tyler Martin (National Institute of Standards and Technology, USA)
  • Rampi Ramprasad (Georgia Institute of Technology, USA)
  • Antonia Statt (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA)

Symposium Organizers

Christopher Kuenneth
Universität Bayreuth
Engineering Sciences
Germany
No Phone for Symposium Organizer Provided , [email protected]

Debra Audus
National Institute of Standards and Technology
USA
No Phone for Symposium Organizer Provided , [email protected]

Lihua Chen
Schrödinger, Inc.
USA
No Phone for Symposium Organizer Provided , [email protected]

Deepak Kamal
Solvay
USA
No Phone for Symposium Organizer Provided , [email protected]

Publishing Alliance

MRS publishes with Springer Nature

 

Symposium Support