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Trapped Ion Quantum Computing
Quantum Simulation
Quantum simulation of actinide chemistry: towards scalable algorithms on trapped ion quantum computers
arXiv
Authors: Kesha Sorathia, Cono Di Paola, Gabriel Greene-Diniz, Carlo A. Gaggioli, David Zsolt Manrique, Joe Gibbs, Sean Harding, Thomas M. Soini, Neil Gaspar, Robert Harker, Mark Storr, David Munoz Ramo
Year
2025
Paper ID
17908
Status
Preprint
Abstract Read
~2 min
Abstract Words
201
Citations
N/A
Abstract
Due to the wide range of technical applications of actinide elements, a thorough understanding of their electronic structure could complement technological improvements in many different areas. Quantum computing could greatly aid in this understanding, as it can potentially provide exponential speedups over classical approaches, thereby offering insights into the complex electronic structure of actinide compounds. As a first foray into quantum computational chemistry of actinides, this paper compares the method of quantum computed moments (QCM) as a noisy intermediate-scale quantum algorithm with a single-ancilla version of quantum phase estimation (QPE), a quantum algorithm expected to run on fault-tolerant quantum computers. We employ these algorithms to study the reaction energetics of plutonium oxides and hydrides. In order to enable quantum hardware experiments, we use several techniques to reduce resource requirements: screening individual Hamiltonian Pauli terms to reduce the measurement requirements of QCM and variational compilation to reduce the depth of QPE circuits. Finally, we derive electronic structure descriptions from a series of representative chemical models and compute the energetics from quantum experiments on Quantinuum's H-series ion trap devices using up to 19 qubits. We find our experiments to be in excellent agreement with results from classical electronic structure calculations and state vector simulations.
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- Due to the wide range of technical applications of actinide elements, a thorough understanding of their electronic structure could complement technological improvements in many...
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