ChemOS: An orchestration software to democratize autonomous discovery.

Journal: PloS one
Published Date:

Abstract

The current Edisonian approach to discovery requires up to two decades of fundamental and applied research for materials technologies to reach the market. Such a slow and capital-intensive turnaround calls for disruptive strategies to expedite innovation. Self-driving laboratories have the potential to provide the means to revolutionize experimentation by empowering automation with artificial intelligence to enable autonomous discovery. However, the lack of adequate software solutions significantly impedes the development of self-driving laboratories. In this paper, we make progress towards addressing this challenge, and we propose and develop an implementation of ChemOS; a portable, modular and versatile software package which supplies the structured layers necessary for the deployment and operation of self-driving laboratories. ChemOS facilitates the integration of automated equipment, and it enables remote control of automated laboratories. ChemOS can operate at various degrees of autonomy; from fully unsupervised experimentation to actively including inputs and feedbacks from researchers into the experimentation loop. The flexibility of ChemOS provides a broad range of functionality as demonstrated on five applications, which were executed on different automated equipment, highlighting various aspects of the software package.

Authors

  • Loïc M Roch
    Department of Chemistry and Chemical Biology, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States of America.
  • Florian Häse
    Department of Chemistry and Chemical Biology , Harvard University , Cambridge , Massachusetts 02138 , USA.
  • Christoph Kreisbeck
    Department of Chemistry and Chemical Biology , Harvard University , Cambridge , 02138 , USA . Email: christophkreisbeck@gmail.com ; Email: aspuru@chemistry.harvard.edu ; Tel: +1-617-384-8188.
  • Teresa Tamayo-Mendoza
    Department of Chemistry and Chemical Biology, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States of America.
  • Lars P E Yunker
    Department of Chemistry, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
  • Jason E Hein
    Department of Chemistry, University of British Columba Vancouver BC Canada jhein@chem.ubc.ca.
  • Alán Aspuru-Guzik
    Departments of Chemistry, Computer Science, University of Toronto St. George Campus Toronto ON Canada.