AQVolt26: High-Temperature r2 SCAN Halide Dataset for Universal ML Potentials and Solid-State Batteries

Date:

April 2, 2026

2026

Type:

Preprint

Publication:

ArXiv

Author(s):

Jiyoon Kim, Chuhong Wang, Aayush R. Singh, Tyler Sours, Shivang Agarwal, AJ Nish, Paul Abruzzo, Ang Xiao, Omar Alla

Abstract

The demand for safe, high-energy-density batteries has spotlighted halide solid-state electrolytes, which offer the potential for enhanced ionic mobility, electrochemical stability, and interfacial deformability. Accelerating their discovery requires extensive molecular dynamics, which has been increasingly enabled by universal machine learning interatomic potentials trained on foundational datasets. However, the dynamic softness of halides poses a stringent test of whether general-purpose models can reliably replace first-principles calculations under the highly distorted, elevated-temperature regimes necessary to probe ion transport. Here, we present AQVolt26, a dataset of 322,656 r2 SCAN single-point calculations for lithium halides, generated via high-temperature configurational sampling across ~ 5K structures. We demonstrate that foundational datasets provide a strong baseline for stable halide chemistries and transfer local forces well, however absolute energy predictions degrade in distorted higher-temperature regimes. Co-training with AQVolt26 resolves this blind spot. Furthermore, incorporating Materials Project relaxation data improves near-equilibrium performance but degrades extreme-strain robustness without enhancing high-temperature force accuracy. These results demonstrate that domain-specific configurational sampling is essential for the reliable dynamic screening of halide electrolytes. Furthermore, our findings suggest that while foundational models provide a robust base, they are most effective for dynamically soft solid-state chemistries when augmented with targeted, high-temperature data. Finally, we show that near-equilibrium relaxation data serves as a task-specific complement rather than a universally beneficial addition.

Download Paper
Back to all publications