Researcher profile

Dan Mendels

Dan Mendels contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

3 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

Enabling Structure-Only Initialization and Out-of-Distribution Generalization in GNN-based Molecular Dynamics Simulators

Machine learning-based simulators offer the potential to model the dynamics of complex systems more efficiently than classical approaches, while retaining differentiability, a key property for materials design. Graph neural network (GNN)-based simulators have shown strong performance across a range of physical domains, including molecular dynamics. However, their reliance on temporal context for accurate prediction limits their use in inverse design settings, where simulations must be initialized from a single static configuration. Moreover, inverse design requires robust out-of-distribution (OOD) generalization, as candidate structures typically lie outside the training domain. Here, we address both challenges by introducing two complementary strategies that enable stable and accurate structure-only initialization of GNN-based simulations. To directly target OOD generalization, we propose an inference-time physics-based optimization framework that constrains model predictions to remain physically consistent during rollout. In addition, we introduce a differentiable, GNN-based barostat that enables accurate tracking of system dimensions and pressure, critical for capturing macroscopic responses and supporting OOD generalization. We evaluate these approaches in the context of uniaxial compression of disordered elastic networks spanning a broad range of geometries, Poisson ratios, and microscopic behaviors. We find that, together, these methods substantially improve rollout stability and enable reliable OOD generalization, including regimes with distinct, more complex dynamics than those in the training data. These results show that, when properly initialized and constrained, GNN-based simulators can serve as efficient and generalizable tools for materials discovery and structural optimization, advancing their use in materials, molecular, and dynamical system design.

preprint2022arXiv

Solubility of organic salts in solvent-antisolvent mixtures: A combined experimental and molecular dynamics simulations approach

We combine molecular dynamics simulations with experiments to estimate solubilities of organic salts in complex growth environments. We predict the solubility by simulations of the growth and dissolution of ions at the crystal surface kink sites at different solution concentrations. Thereby, the solubility is identified as the solution's salt concentration, where the energy of the ion pair dissolved in solution equals the energy of the ion pair crystallized at the kink sites. The simulation methodology is demonstrated for the case of anhydrous sodium acetate crystallized from various solvent-antisolvent mixtures. To validate the predicted solubilities, we have measured the solubilities of sodium acetate in-house, using an experimental setup and measurement protocol that guarantees moisture-free conditions, which is key for a hygroscopic compound like sodium acetate. We observe excellent agreement between the experimental and the computationally evaluated solubilities for sodium acetate in different solvent-antisolvent mixtures. Given the agreement and the rich data the simulations produce, we can use them to complement experimental tasks which in turn will reduce time and capital in the design of complicated industrial crystallization processes of organic salts.

preprint2022arXiv

Systematic Modification of Functionality in Disordered Elastic Networks Through Free Energy Surface Tailoring

Advances in manufacturing and characterization of complex molecular systems have created a need for new methods for design at molecular length scales. Emerging approaches are increasingly relying on the use of Artificial Intelligence (AI), and the training of AI models on large data libraries. This paradigm shift has led to successful applications, but shortcomings related to interpretability and generalizability continue to pose challenges. Here, we explore an alternative paradigm in which AI is combined with physics-based considerations for molecular and materials engineering. Specifically, collective variables, akin to those used in enhanced sampled simulations, are constructed using a machine learning (ML) model trained on data gathered from a single system. Through the ML-constructed collective variables, it becomes possible to identify critical molecular interactions in the system of interest, the modulation of which enables a systematic tailoring of the system's free energy landscape. To explore the efficacy of the proposed approach, we use it to engineer allosteric regulation, and uniaxial strain fluctuations in a complex disordered elastic network. Its successful application in these two cases provides insights regarding how functionality is governed in systems characterized by extensive connectivity, and points to its potential for design of complex molecular systems.