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Trapped Ion Quantum Computing

Constraint-preserving quantum algorithm for the multi-frequency antenna placement problem

arXiv
Authors: Matteo Vandelli, Francesco Ferrari, Daniele Dragoni

Year

2025

Paper ID

16923

Status

Preprint

Abstract Read

~2 min

Abstract Words

222

Citations

N/A

Abstract

Quantum algorithms for combinatorial optimization typically encode constraints as soft penalties within the objective function, which can reduce efficiency and scalability compared to state-of-the-art classical methods that instead exploit constraints to guide the search toward high-quality solutions. Although solving this issue for an arbitrary problem is inherently a hard task, we address this challenge for a specific problem in the field of telecommunications, the multi-frequency antenna placement problem, by introducing a constraint-preserving quantum adiabatic algorithm (QAA). To this aim, we construct a quantum circuit that prepares an initial state comprising an equal superposition of all feasible solutions, and define a custom mixer that preserves both the one-hot encoding constraint for vertex coloring and the cardinality constraint on the number of antennas. This scheme can be extended to a broader range of applications characterized by similar constraints. We first benchmark the performance of this quantum algorithm against a basic version of QAA, demonstrating superior performance in terms of feasibility and success probability. We then apply this algorithm to large problem sizes with hundreds of variables using a constraint-aware decomposition method based on the SPLIT framework. Our results indicate competitive performance against other large-scale classical approaches, such as branch-and-bound and simulated annealing. This work supports previous claims that constraint-aware algorithms are crucial for the practical and efficient application of quantum methods in industrial settings.

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  • This paper contributes to the Trapped-Ion Quantum Computing research area in the Quantum Articles archive.
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  • Quantum algorithms for combinatorial optimization typically encode constraints as soft penalties within the objective function, which can reduce efficiency and scalability...

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