The Toyota Research Institute announced that it will be partnering with Northwestern University to use the world’s first data factory with the goal of making vehicles greener and more efficient.that is capable of synthesizing materials at record speeds. The team will use it to look through Northwestern’s new “Megalibraries.” These contain more new inorganic materials than scientists have ever collected and categorized in the past.
Rather than using a trial and error approach to combining materials hoping for something useful, the data factory will work through the data in the megalibraries using AI to search the materials genome to find what will work in a given circumstance. Even with machine learning, prior to this collaboration,
says that AI was trained on lower-quality data sets. It believes, though, that this system can be trained to enable complex algorithms for the rapid and objective discovery of crucial materials for specific needs.“This groundbreaking research marks an inflection point in how we discover and develop critical materials,” said Chad Mirkin, director of the International Institute for Nanotechnology and the George B. Rathmann Professor of Chemistry at Northwestern.