Researcher profile

Franz M. Rohrhofer

Franz M. Rohrhofer contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

2 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

Differentiable Chemistry in PINNs for Solving Parameterized and Stiff Reaction Systems

From neural ODEs to continuous-time machine learning, differentiable solvers allow physics, optimization, and simulation to become trainable components within deep learning systems. This has opened the path to a new generation of deep learning frameworks for scientific computing, with many promising applications still emerging. In this paper, we integrate a differentiable chemistry solver into a modified physics-informed neural network to solve parameterized reaction systems that are inherently stiff. The proposed framework introduces several key components required to overcome limitations of standard physics-informed neural networks. These include a differentiable chemistry solver, a network architecture for parameterized solutions, and residual weighting tailored to stiff reactions. We evaluate the framework on a set of differential equations related to hydrogen combustion, which include initial/boundary value problems, inverse parameter identification, and a parameterized partial differential equation. Our results highlight the ability of the proposed approach to extend physics-informed neural networks to stiff chemical systems that were previously inaccessible.

preprint2021arXiv

Importance of feature engineering and database selection in a machine learning model: A case study on carbon crystal structures

Drive towards improved performance of machine learning models has led to the creation of complex features representing a database of condensed matter systems. The complex features, however, do not offer an intuitive explanation on which physical attributes do improve the performance. The effect of the database on the performance of the trained model is often neglected. In this work we seek to understand in depth the effect that the choice of features and the properties of the database have on a machine learning application. In our experiments, we consider the complex phase space of carbon as a test case, for which we use a set of simple, human understandable and cheaply computable features for the aim of predicting the total energy of the crystal structure. Our study shows that (i) the performance of the machine learning model varies depending on the set of features and the database, (ii) is not transferable to every structure in the phase space and (iii) depends on how well structures are represented in the database.