Researchers used a kind of artificial intelligence called deep reinforcement learning to steer the atoms, each a fraction of a nanometer in size, into the lattice shape – with a view to building new materials or nanodevices.
Postdoctoral researcher I-Ju Chen says the main application for deep reinforcement learning is in robotics. “We’re also building robotic arms with deep learning, but for moving atoms,” she explains. “Reinforcement learning is successful in things like playing chess or video games, but we’ve applied it to solve technical problems at the nanoscale.”
Making very small devices based on single atoms is important for nanodevices like transistors or memory. Testing how and whether these devices work at their absolute limits is one application for this kind of atomic manipulation, says Chen. Building new materials atom-by-atom, rather than using traditional chemical techniques, may also reveal interesting properties related to superconductivity or quantum states.
Using their method, the scientists were able to assemble a star-like lattice from single atoms of silver in a very cold vacuum chamber. The process is similar to moving marbles around a Chinese checkers board, but with very tiny tweezers grabbing and dragging each atom into place.
The silver star lattice made by Chen and colleagues at the Finnish Center for Artificial Intelligence FCAI and Aalto University is a demonstration of what deep reinforcement learning can achieve.
“The precise movement of atoms is hard to even for human experts,” says Chen. “We adapted existing deep reinforcement learning for this purpose. It took the algorithm on the order of one day to learn and then about one hour to build the lattice.” The reinforcement part of this type of deep learning refers to how the AI is guided – through rewards for correct actions or outputs. “Give it a goal, and it will do it. It can solve problems that humans don’t know how to solve.”
Applying this approach to the world of nanoscience materials is new. According to researchers, nano techniques can become more powerful with the injection of machine learning because it can accelerate the parameter selection and trial-and-error usually done by a person. “We showed that this task can be completed perfectly through reinforcement learning,” concludes Chen.
The results demonstrate that state-of-the-art deep reinforcement learning can offer effective solutions to real-world challenges in nanofabrication and powerful approaches to increasingly complex scientific experiments at the atomic scale.
Journal reference:
- I-Ju Chen, Markus Aapro, Abraham Kipnis, Alexander Ilin, Peter Liljeroth and Adam S. Foster. Precise atom manipulation through deep reinforcement learning. Nature Communications, 2022; DOI: 10.1038/s41467-022-35149-w
Using artificial intelligence to steer atoms into a lattice shape
Source: Tambay News
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