<div class="csl-bib-body">
<div class="csl-entry">Galustian, L., Mark, K. A., Karwounopoulos, J., Kovar, M. P.-P., & Heid, E. (2025). GoFlow: efficient transition state geometry prediction with flow matching and E(3)-equivariant neural networks. <i>Digital Discovery</i>. https://doi.org/10.1039/d5dd00283d</div>
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dc.identifier.uri
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12708/222696
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dc.description.abstract
Transition state (TS) geometries of chemical reactions are key to understanding reaction mechanisms and estimating kinetic properties. Inferring these directly from 2D reaction graphs offers chemists a powerful tool for rapid and accessible reaction analysis. Quantum chemical methods for computing TSs are computationally intensive and often infeasible for larger molecular systems. Recently, deep learning-based diffusion models have shown promise in generating TSs from 2D reaction graphs for single-step reactions. However, framing TS generation as a diffusion process, by design, requires a prohibitively large number of sampling steps during inference. Here we show that modeling TS generation as an optimal transport flow problem, solved via E(3)-equivariant flow matching with geometric tensor networks, achieves over a hundredfold speedup in inference while improving geometric accuracy compared to the state-of-the-art. This breakthrough increase in sampling efficiency and predictive accuracy enables the practical use of deep learning-based TS generators in high-throughput settings for larger and more complex chemical systems. Our method, GoFlow, thus represents a significant methodological advancement in machine learning-based TS generation, bringing it closer to widespread use in computational chemistry workflows.
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dc.description.sponsorship
European Commission
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dc.description.sponsorship
FWF - Österr. Wissenschaftsfonds
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dc.language.iso
en
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dc.publisher
Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC)
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dc.relation.ispartof
Digital Discovery
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dc.subject
Flow matching
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dc.subject
state geometry
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dc.subject
neural networks
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dc.title
GoFlow: efficient transition state geometry prediction with flow matching and E(3)-equivariant neural networks