APS Logo

Solving an Industrially Relevant Quantum Chemistry Problem on Quantum Hardware

ORAL

Abstract

Quantum chemical calculations are among the most promising applications for quantum computing. Implementations of dedicated quantum algorithms on available quantum hardware were so far, however, mostly limited to comparatively simple systems without strong correlations. As such, they can also be addressed by classically efficient single-reference methods. Here we calculate the lowest energy eigenvalue of active space Hamiltonians of industrially relevant and strongly correlated metal chelates on trapped ion quantum hardware, and integrate the results into a typical industrial quantum chemical workflow to arrive at chemically meaningful properties.

We are able to achieve chemical accuracy by training a variational quantum algorithm on quantum hardware, followed by a classical diagonalization in the subspace of states measured as outputs of the quantum circuit. This approach is particularly measurement-efficient, requiring 600 single-shot measurements per cost function evaluation on a ten qubit system, and allows for efficient post-processing to handle erroneous runs.

Publication: https://arxiv.org/pdf/2408.10801

Presenters

  • Michael Josef Hartmann

    Friedrich-Alexander University Erlangen-Nuremberg

Authors

  • Ludwig Nützel

    Friedrich-Alexander University Erlangen-Nuremberg

  • Alexander Gresch

    Heinrich Heine University Düsseldorf

  • Lukas Hehn

    BASF SE

  • Lucas Marti

    Friedrich-Alexander University Erlangen-Nuremberg, Friedrich-Alexander Universität

  • Robert Freund

    University of Innsbruck

  • Alex Steiner

    University of Innsbruck

  • Christian D Marciniak

    University of Innsbruck

  • Timo Eckstein

    Friedrich-Alexander University Erlangen-Nuremberg

  • Nina Stockinger

    Technical University of Munich

  • Stefan Wolf

    Friedrich-Alexander University Erlangen-Nuremberg

  • Thomas Monz

    University of Innsbruck

  • Michael Kühn

    BASF SE

  • Michael Josef Hartmann

    Friedrich-Alexander University Erlangen-Nuremberg