Deep learning reveals key predictors of thermal conductivity in covalent organic frameworks

Journal Article (2025)
Author(s)

P. Thakolkaran (TU Delft - Team Sid Kumar)

Yiwen Zheng (University of Washington)

Yaqi Guo (TU Delft - Team Sid Kumar)

Aniruddh Vashisth (University of Washington)

Siddhant Kumar (TU Delft - Team Sid Kumar)

Research Group
Team Sid Kumar
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1039/D5DD00126A
More Info
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Publication Year
2025
Language
English
Research Group
Team Sid Kumar
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Abstract

The thermal conductivity of covalent organic frameworks (COFs), an emerging class of nanoporous polymeric materials, is crucial for many applications, yet the link between their structure and thermal properties remains poorly understood. Analysis of a dataset containing over 2400 COFs reveals that conventional features such as density, pore size, void fraction, and surface area do not reliably predict thermal conductivity. To address this, an attention-based machine learning model was trained, accurately predicting thermal conductivities even for structures outside the training set. The attention mechanism was then utilized to investigate the model's success. The analysis identified dangling molecular branches as a key predictor of thermal conductivity, leading us to define the dangling mass ratio (DMR), a descriptor that quantifies the fraction of atomic mass in dangling branches relative to the total COF mass. Feature importance assessments on regression models confirm the significance of DMR in predicting thermal conductivity. These findings indicate that COFs with dangling functional groups exhibit lower thermal transfer capabilities. Molecular dynamics simulations support this observation, revealing significant mismatches in the vibrational density of states due to the presence of dangling branches.