Thermal conductivities of monolayer graphene oxide from machine learning molecular dynamics simulations
Pith reviewed 2026-05-16 20:04 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
Reduced graphene oxide shows thermal conductivities of only a few to tens of W m^{-1} K^{-1}, far below pristine graphene.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
Through large-scale molecular dynamics simulations enabled by a neuroevolution potential trained on density functional theory data, the study establishes that thermally reduced monolayer graphene oxide exhibits thermal conductivities ranging from a few to tens of Wm^{-1}K^{-1}. This is substantially lower than pristine GO without defects and far below graphene. The thermal conductivity increases moderately with increasing OH/O ratio, except at O/C=0.5 where the trend inverts, and decreases significantly with increasing O/C ratio, a trend strongly correlated with the fraction of recovered graphene-like structures.
What carries the argument
A neuroevolution potential (NEP) trained on an existing DFT dataset, used with homogeneous nonequilibrium MD and quantum-statistical corrections to compute thermal conductivities across oxidation levels.
Load-bearing premise
The neuroevolution potential trained on the DFT dataset accurately reproduces the thermal transport properties for all oxidation and reduction states examined, including the quantum correction.
What would settle it
Experimental measurements of thermal conductivity on reduced graphene oxide samples with controlled O/C ratios from 0.1 to 0.5 and varying OH/O ratios would directly test the predicted values and trends.
Figures
read the original abstract
Graphene oxide (GO) exhibits rich chemical heterogeneity that strongly influences its structural, thermal, and mechanical properties, yet quantitatively linking reduction chemistry to heat transport remains challenging. In this work, we develop a machine-learned neuroevolution potential (NEP) trained on an existing density functional theory dataset (\textit{Angew.\ Chem.\ Int.\ Ed.}, \textbf{63} , e202410088 (2024)), achieving reasonable accuracy at a computational cost much lower than the existing machine-learned and empirical potentials. Leveraging this potential, we perform large-scale molecular dynamics (MD) simulations to model the thermal reduction of GO across realistic structural domains. Using the homogeneous nonequilibrium MD method with a proper quantum-statistical correction scheme, we find that reduced GO exhibits strongly suppressed thermal conductivities, ranging from a few to tens of Wm$^{-1}$K$^{-1}$, substantially lower than pristine GO without defects and far below graphene. Moreover, the thermal conductivity of reduced GO increases moderately with increasing OH/O ratio, except at the highest oxidation level (O/C=0.5) where this trend inverts, while decreasing significantly with increasing O/C ratio, a trend strongly correlated with the fraction of recovered graphene-like structures. Our work provides a computationally tractable and predictive atomistic machine learning framework for exploring how chemical structure governs heat transport in heterogeneous carbon materials.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The manuscript develops a neuroevolution potential (NEP) trained on an existing DFT dataset for graphene oxide (GO). Using this potential in large-scale molecular dynamics simulations with the homogeneous nonequilibrium MD (HNEMD) method and a quantum-statistical correction, the authors compute thermal conductivities for reduced GO across various oxidation levels. They report that reduced GO has strongly suppressed thermal conductivities (a few to tens of W m^{-1} K^{-1}), much lower than pristine graphene or defect-free GO, with conductivity increasing moderately with OH/O ratio (except inverting at O/C=0.5) and decreasing with O/C ratio, correlated with recovered graphene-like structures.
Significance. If the NEP is shown to accurately predict thermal transport, the work supplies a computationally efficient framework for connecting reduction chemistry to heat conduction in chemically heterogeneous 2D carbon materials. The reported trends versus OH/O and O/C ratios, together with the correlation to graphene-like domain recovery, would be of interest for materials design where direct experiment is difficult.
major comments (2)
- Abstract: The central quantitative claims (kappa reduced to a few–tens of W m^{-1} K^{-1} and the specific trends with OH/O and O/C) rest on the NEP reproducing phonon spectra, anharmonic scattering rates, and defect suppression across oxidation states. No direct validation of predicted thermal conductivities against experimental GO data or independent ab initio MD/HNEMD results for the same compositions is provided, leaving the accuracy of the reported values and trends unconfirmed.
- Methods (NEP training and HNEMD section): The quantum-statistical correction is applied to classical HNEMD trajectories under the assumption that the NEP force field already yields correct mode-specific heat capacities and lifetimes. Without benchmarks demonstrating that the NEP matches DFT-level thermal transport properties over the full range of O/C and OH/O ratios studied, systematic errors in the potential propagate directly into the reported trends and the inversion at O/C=0.5.
minor comments (2)
- Abstract: The baseline comparison to 'pristine GO without defects' should be defined more precisely (e.g., specific defect density or structure) when first introduced in the results.
- Abstract: The phrase 'a proper quantum-statistical correction scheme' would benefit from a short parenthetical description or citation to improve immediate clarity for readers.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the careful and constructive review of our manuscript. We address the major comments point by point below, providing the strongest honest defense of our work while acknowledging limitations. Revisions have been made to improve clarity and discussion of assumptions where feasible.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: Abstract: The central quantitative claims (kappa reduced to a few–tens of W m^{-1} K^{-1} and the specific trends with OH/O and O/C) rest on the NEP reproducing phonon spectra, anharmonic scattering rates, and defect suppression across oxidation states. No direct validation of predicted thermal conductivities against experimental GO data or independent ab initio MD/HNEMD results for the same compositions is provided, leaving the accuracy of the reported values and trends unconfirmed.
Authors: We acknowledge the absence of direct experimental or independent ab initio thermal conductivity benchmarks for the exact compositions studied, which is a genuine limitation given the scarcity of such data for well-characterized reduced GO samples and the prohibitive cost of ab initio MD for large systems. The NEP was trained on a comprehensive DFT dataset and validated for energies, forces, and structural properties, with additional phonon spectra comparisons now added to the SI for representative structures. The reported trends are robustly correlated with the fraction of recovered graphene-like domains, which emerges directly from the simulations and aligns with known physics of defect scattering in 2D carbons. In revision, we have modified the abstract and added a dedicated paragraph in the discussion section to explicitly state the predictive nature of the results, cite analogous MLMD thermal transport studies, and note the lack of direct benchmarks as a caveat. revision: partial
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Referee: Methods (NEP training and HNEMD section): The quantum-statistical correction is applied to classical HNEMD trajectories under the assumption that the NEP force field already yields correct mode-specific heat capacities and lifetimes. Without benchmarks demonstrating that the NEP matches DFT-level thermal transport properties over the full range of O/C and OH/O ratios studied, systematic errors in the potential propagate directly into the reported trends and the inversion at O/C=0.5.
Authors: The quantum-statistical correction follows established protocols in the literature for classical MD thermal conductivity calculations. We have validated the NEP against DFT phonon dispersions for multiple GO compositions, supporting the underlying vibrational properties. Full ab initio HNEMD benchmarks across all O/C and OH/O ratios are not feasible with current resources for the system sizes required for convergence. We agree this leaves room for potential systematic bias and have revised the methods section to expand on the correction scheme, include error discussion, and provide additional justification for the inversion at O/C=0.5 based on structural metrics (graphene-like domain fraction) that are directly computed and less sensitive to the potential details. revision: partial
- Direct ab initio MD or HNEMD benchmarks of thermal conductivities for the full range of studied O/C and OH/O ratios, due to prohibitive computational expense for converged large-scale simulations
Circularity Check
No significant circularity; derivation chain is self-contained
full rationale
The paper trains an NEP on an external, pre-existing DFT dataset cited from Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. (2024), then runs forward MD simulations with HNEMD plus a quantum-statistical correction to obtain thermal conductivities and their trends versus OH/O and O/C ratios. No equation or step reduces the reported kappa values to fitted inputs by construction; the simulation outputs are generated from the potential rather than presupposed. The central claims about suppression to a few–tens of W m^{-1} K^{-1} and the specific monotonic trends emerge from the large-scale MD trajectories, not from re-labeling of training data. Any self-citations are peripheral and non-load-bearing for the conductivity results.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (1)
- domain assumption The neuroevolution potential trained on the 2024 DFT dataset reproduces phonon transport properties with sufficient accuracy for the oxidation levels studied.
Reference graph
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