Maximum trainable size #150
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What @ilyes319 writes is how we have been training ML force fields up until now - i.e. 10-100-300 atom unit cells, and as many of these as necessary or available. But I am quite interested in training models on many fewer but much larger cells. For example, are a few special aspects of this training: you will have very few energy values, but the same number of force components as with many cells. What is your use case for having a large number of cells? Combining large cells with small cells certainly would be straightforward. So if you have lots of small cells, and a few large ones that have special structures in them, I can't see any problem with that. |
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What @ilyes319 writes is how we have been training ML force fields up until now - i.e. 10-100-300 atom unit cells, and as many of these as necessary or available. But I am quite interested in training models on many fewer but much larger cells. For example, are a few special aspects of this training: you will have very few energy values, but the same number of force components as with many cells. What is your use case for having a large number of cells?
Combining large cells with small cells certainly would be straightforward. So if you have lots of small cells, and a few large ones that have special structures in them, I can't see any problem with that.