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Large Language Models Transform Organic Synthesis From Reaction Prediction to Automation

Published: August 7, 2025 | arXiv ID: 2508.05427v1

By: Kartar Kumar Lohana Tharwani , Rajesh Kumar , Sumita and more

Potential Business Impact:

AI helps scientists invent new things faster.

Large language models (LLMs) are beginning to reshape how chemists plan and run reactions in organic synthesis. Trained on millions of reported transformations, these text-based models can propose synthetic routes, forecast reaction outcomes and even instruct robots that execute experiments without human supervision. Here we survey the milestones that turned LLMs from speculative tools into practical lab partners. We show how coupling LLMs with graph neural networks, quantum calculations and real-time spectroscopy shrinks discovery cycles and supports greener, data-driven chemistry. We discuss limitations, including biased datasets, opaque reasoning and the need for safety gates that prevent unintentional hazards. Finally, we outline community initiatives open benchmarks, federated learning and explainable interfaces that aim to democratize access while keeping humans firmly in control. These advances chart a path towards rapid, reliable and inclusive molecular innovation powered by artificial intelligence and automation.

Country of Origin
🇨🇳 China

Page Count
23 pages

Category
Computer Science:
Artificial Intelligence