Concept of orbital entanglement and correlation in quantum chemistry
ORAL
Abstract
A recent development in quantum chemistry has established the quantum mutual information between orbitals as a major descriptor of electronic structure. This has already facilitated remarkable improvements of numerical methods and may lead to a more comprehensive foundation for chemical bonding theory. Building on this promising development, our work provides a refined discussion of quantum information theoretical concepts by introducing the physical correlation and its separation into classical and quantum parts as distinctive quantifiers of electronic structure. In particular, we succeed in quantifying the entanglement. Intriguingly, our results for different molecules reveal that the total correlation between orbitals is mainly classical, raising questions about the general significance of entanglement in chemical bonding. Our work also shows that implementing the fundamental particle number superselection rule, so far not accounted for in quantum chemistry, removes a major part of correlation and entanglement previously seen. In that respect, realizing quantum information processing tasks with molecular systems might be more challenging than anticipated.
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Presenters
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Sreetama Das
University of Munich
Authors
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Sreetama Das
University of Munich
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Lexin Ding
Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich, University of Munich
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Sam Mardazad
University of Munich
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szilard szalay
Wigner research centre for physics
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Ulrich Joseph Schollwoeck
University of Munich, Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich
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Zoltán Zimborás
Wigner Research Center for Physics, Wigner Research Centre for Physics, Wigner research centre for physics, Budapest Univ of Tech, Wigner Research Centre for Physics, Hungarian Academy of Sciences
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Christian Schilling
Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich, University of Munich, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München