Researchers can currently test tens of thousands of potential catalysts a year but Facebook and Carniegie Mellon believe they can increase the number to millions, or even billions, of catalysts with the help of AI.
Electrocatalysts can be used to convert excess solar and wind power into other fuels, such as hydrogen and ethanol, that are easier to store. However, today’s electrocatalysts are rare and expensive, with platinum being a good example, and finding new ones hasn’t been easy as there are billions of ways that elements can be combined to make them.
The social media giant and the university on Wednesday released some of their own AI software “models” that can help to find new catalysts but they want other scientists to have a go as well.
To support these scientists, Facebook and Carnegie Mellon have released a data set with information on potential catalysts that scientists can use to create new pieces of software.
Facebook said the “Open Catalyst 2020” data set required 70 million hours of compute time to produce. The data set includes “relaxation” calculations for a million possible catalysts as well as supplemental calculations.
Source: CNBC