RLEASE: Reinforcement Learning Efficient Active Space Engine
read the original abstract
Selecting the active space for multireference electronic-structure calculations is a long-standing bottleneck that often requires expert chemical intuition and costly trial-and-error. We introduce RLEASE (Reinforcement Learning Efficient Active Space Engine), a low-cost method for automatic, geometry-dependent active-space selection. A neural network predicts per-orbital diagnostic scores ($\hat{s}_{1}$) from inexpensive Hartree-Fock orbital descriptors, and a learned threshold partitions orbitals into active and inactive sets. The threshold policy is optimized with proximal policy optimization, using the discrepancy between sc-NEVPT2 energies computed with the selected active space and DMRG reference energies as the reward. After training, the same RLEASE-selected active spaces can be used with multireference perturbation theory or composite coupled-cluster energy estimators. Despite being trained on a small set of molecules and geometries, RLEASE transfers to chemically diverse test systems, producing compact active spaces and competitive potential-energy surfaces relative to established entropy-based selectors. Because deployment requires only inexpensive orbital descriptors and neural-network inference, RLEASE enables high-throughput multireference workflows without molecule-specific retraining or target-system pilot DMRG calculations.
This paper has not been read by Pith yet.
discussion (0)
Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.