During the continuous charge and discharge process in lithium-sulfur batteries, one of the next-generation batteries, polysulfides are generated in the battery’s electrolyte, and impact its performance in terms of power and capacity by involving the process. The amount of polysulfides in the electrolyte could be estimated by the change of the Gibbs free energy of the electrolyte, Δ mixG in the presence of polysulfide. However, obtaining Δ mixG of the diverse mixtures of components in the electrolyte is a complex and expensive task that shows itself as a bottleneck in optimization of electrolytes. In this work, we present a machine-learning approach for predicting Δ mixG of electrolytes. The proposed architecture utilizes (1) an attention-based model (Attentive FP), a contrastive learning model (MolCLR) or morgan fingerprints to represent chemical components, and (2) transformers to account for the interactions between chemicals in the electrolyte. This architecture was not only capable of predicting electrolyte properties, including those of chemicals not used during training, but also providing insights into chemical interactions within electrolytes. It revealed that interactions with other chemicals relate to the logP and molecular weight of the chemicals.
CITATION STYLE
Lee, J., Yang, H., Park, C., Park, S. H., Jang, E., Kwack, H., … Lee, H. (2023). Attention-based solubility prediction of polysulfide and electrolyte analysis for lithium–sulfur batteries. Scientific Reports, 13(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-47154-0
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