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Chemical shifts in molecular solids by machine learning

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Due to their strong dependence on local atonic environments, NMR chemical shifts are among the most powerful tools for strucutre elucidation of powdered solids or amorphous materials. Unfortunately, using them for… Click to show full abstract

Due to their strong dependence on local atonic environments, NMR chemical shifts are among the most powerful tools for strucutre elucidation of powdered solids or amorphous materials. Unfortunately, using them for structure determination depends on the ability to calculate them, which  comes at the cost of high accuracy first-principles calculations. Machine learning has recently emerged as a way to overcome the need for quantum chemical calculations, but for chemical shifts in solids it is hindered by the chemical and combinatorial space spanned by molecular solids, the strong dependency of chemical shifts on their environment, and the lack of an experimental database of shifts. We propose a machine learning method based on local environments to accurately predict chemical shifts of molecular solids and their polymorphs to within DFT accuracy. We also demonstrate that the trained model is able to determine, based on the match between experimentally measured and ML-predicted shifts, the structures of cocaine and the drug 4-[4-(2-adamantylcarbamoyl)-5-tert-butylpyrazol-1-yl]benzoic acid.Solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance combined with quantum chemical shift predictions is limited by high computational cost. Here, the authors use machine learning based on local atomic environments to predict experimental chemical shifts in molecular solids with accuracy similar to density functional theory.

Keywords: chemical shifts; machine learning; solids machine; molecular solids; shifts molecular

Journal Title: Nature Communications
Year Published: 2018

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