Abstract

In this study, we investigate the structure-stability relationship of hypothetical Nd-Fe-B crystal structures using descriptor-relevance analysis and the t-SNE dimensionality reduction method. 149 hypothetical Nd-Fe-B crystal structures are generated from 5967 LA-T-X host structures in the Open Quantum Materials Database by using the elemental substitution method, with LA denoting lanthanides, T denoting transition metals, and X denoting light elements such as B, C, N, and O. By borrowing the skeletal structure of each of the host materials, a hypothetical crystal structure is created by substituting all lanthanide sites with Nd, all transition metal sites with Fe, and all light element sites with B. High-throughput first-principle calculations are applied to evaluate the phase stability of these structures. Twenty of them are found to be potentially formable. As the first investigative result, the descriptor-relevance analysis on the orbital field matrix (OFM) materials' descriptor reveals the average atomic coordination number as the essential factor in determining the structure stability of these substituted Nd-Fe-B crystal structures. 19 among 20 hypothetical structures that are found potentially formable have an average coordination number larger than 6.5. By applying the t-SNE dimensionality reduction method, all the local structures represented by the OFM descriptors are integrated into a visible space to study the detailed correlation between their characteristics and the stability of the crystal structure to which they belong. We discover that unstable substituted structures frequently carry Nd and Fe local structures with two prominent points: low average coordination numbers and fully occupied B neighboring atoms. Moreover, there are only three popular forms of B local structures appearing on all potentially formable substituted structures: cage networks, planar networks, and interstitial sites. The discovered relationships are promising to speed up the screening process for the new formable crystal structures.

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