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Quantum Machine Learning
Quantum Extreme Reservoir Computing for Phase Classification of Polymer Alloy Microstructures
arXiv
Authors: Arisa Ikeda, Akitada Sakurai, Kae Nemoto, Mayu Muramatsu
Year
2026
Paper ID
4214
Status
Preprint
Abstract Read
~2 min
Abstract Words
165
Citations
N/A
Abstract
Quantum machine learning (QML) is expected to offer new opportunities to process high-dimensional data efficiently by exploiting the exponentially large state space of quantum systems. In this work, we apply quantum extreme reservoir computing (QERC) to the classification of microstructure images of polymer alloys generated using self-consistent field theory (SCFT). While previous QML efforts have primarily focused on benchmark datasets such as MNIST, our work demonstrates the applicability of QERC to engineering data with direct materials relevance. Through numerical experiments, we examine the influence of key computational parameters-including the number of qubits, sampling cost (the number of measurement shots), and reservoir configuration-on classification performance. The resulting phase classifications are depicted as phase diagrams that illustrate the phase transitions in polymer morphology, establishing an understandable connection between quantum model outputs and material behavior. These results illustrate QERC performance on realistic materials datasets and suggest practical guidelines for quantum encoder design and model generalization. This work establishes a foundation for integrating quantum learning techniques into materials informatics.
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- This paper contributes to the Quantum Machine Learning research area in the Quantum Articles archive.
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- Quantum machine learning (QML) is expected to offer new opportunities to process high-dimensional data efficiently by exploiting the exponentially large state space of quantum...
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