Modelling carbon capture on metal-organic frameworks with quantum computing
ORAL
Abstract
Despite the recent progress in quantum computational algorithms for chemistry, there is a dearth of quantum computational simulations focused on material science applications, especially for the energy sector, where next generation sorbing materials are urgently needed to battle climate change. To drive their development, quantum computing is applied to the problem of CO2 adsorption in Al-fumarate Metal-Organic Frameworks. Fragmentation strategies based on Density Matrix Embedding Theory are applied, using a variational quantum algorithm as a fragment solver, along with active space selection to minimise qubit number. By investigating different fragmentation strategies and solvers, we propose a methodology to apply quantum computing to Al-fumarate interacting with a CO2 molecule, demonstrating the feasibility of treating a complex porous system as a concrete application of quantum computing. Our work paves the way for the use of quantum computing techniques in the quest of sorbents optimisation for more efficient carbon capture and conversion applications.
–
Publication: Modelling Carbon Capture on Metal-Organic Frameworks with Quantum Computing : https://arxiv.org/abs/2203.15546
Presenters
-
Wassil Sennane
TotalEnergies
Authors
-
Wassil Sennane
TotalEnergies
-
Marko J Rancic
TotalEnergies
-
Gabriel Greene-Diniz
Cambridge Quantum
-
David Zsolt Manrique
Cambridge Quantum
-
Yann Magnin
TotalEnergies
-
Philippe Cordier
TotalEnergies
-
Philip Llewellyn
TotalEnergies
-
Michal Krompiec
Cambridge Quantum
-
David Muñoz Ramo
Cambridge Quantum
-
Elvira Shishenina
BMW Group