<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><rdf:RDF xmlns:rdf="http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#" xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/" xmlns:dcq="http://purl.org/dc/terms/"><records count="1" morepages="false" start="1" end="1"><record rownumber="1"><dc:product_type>Journal Article</dc:product_type><dc:title>Data-Driven Compression of Electron-Phonon Interactions</dc:title><dc:creator>Luo, Yao; Desai, Dhruv; Chang, Benjamin K; Park, Jinsoo; Bernardi, Marco</dc:creator><dc:corporate_author/><dc:editor/><dc:description>First-principles calculations of electron interactions in materials have seen rapid progress in recent years, with electron-phonon (e-ph) interactions being a prime example. However, these techniques use large matrices encoding the interactions on dense momentum grids, which reduces computational efficiency and obscures interpretability. For e-ph interactions, existing interpolation techniques leverage locality in real space, but the high dimensionality of the data remains a bottleneck to balance cost and accuracy. Here we show an efficient way to compress e-ph interactions based on singular value decomposition (SVD), a widely used matrix and image compression technique. Leveraging (un)constrained SVD methods, we accurately predict material properties related to e-ph interactions—including charge mobility, spin relaxation times, band renormalization, and superconducting critical temperature—while using only a small fraction (1%–2%) of the interaction data. These findings unveil the hidden low-dimensional nature of e-ph interactions. Furthermore, they accelerate state-of-the-art first-principles e-ph calculations by about 2 orders of magnitude without sacrificing accuracy. Our Pareto-optimal parametrization of e-ph interactions can be readily generalized to electron-electron and electron-defect interactions, as well as to other couplings, advancing quantitative studies of condensed matter.</dc:description><dc:publisher>American Physical Society</dc:publisher><dc:date>2024-05-01</dc:date><dc:nsf_par_id>10553473</dc:nsf_par_id><dc:journal_name>Physical Review X</dc:journal_name><dc:journal_volume>14</dc:journal_volume><dc:journal_issue>2</dc:journal_issue><dc:page_range_or_elocation/><dc:issn>2160-3308</dc:issn><dc:isbn/><dc:doi>https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevX.14.021023</dc:doi><dcq:identifierAwardId>2209262</dcq:identifierAwardId><dc:subject/><dc:version_number/><dc:location/><dc:rights/><dc:institution/><dc:sponsoring_org>National Science Foundation</dc:sponsoring_org></record></records></rdf:RDF>