1 / 25

Quantum random walks in energy landscapes

Quantum random walks in energy landscapes. Stephan Hoyer , Mohan Sarovar and K. Birgitta Whaley QuEBS 2009 Thanks: DARPA, Akihito Ishizaki, Yuan-Chung Cheng. Berkeley Quantum Information and Computation Center. Is photosynthesis doing quantum computing?.

shasta
Download Presentation

Quantum random walks in energy landscapes

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Quantum random walks in energy landscapes Stephan Hoyer, Mohan Sarovar and K. Birgitta Whaley QuEBS 2009 Thanks: DARPA, Akihito Ishizaki, Yuan-Chung Cheng Berkeley Quantum Information and Computation Center

  2. Is photosynthesis doing quantum computing? • Fleming group at Berkeley found quantum coherences in light-harvesting complexes • Comparisons to quantum algorithms reasonable? • Intuitive analogy – quantum random walk • Quantum speedup in photosynthesis? Engel et al., Nature 446, 782 (2007) Lee et al., Science 316, 1462 (2007)

  3. 1 2 6 7 5 3 4 Light-harvesting complexes as quantum walks • Single exciton, tight-binding approach • Energy landscapes • Disordered – random environment • Ordered – energy funnels • Decoherence • Room temperature in a protein cage Energy Fenna-Matthews-Olson (FMO) complex of green sulfur bacteria

  4. Outline • Principles of quantum walks in energy landscapes • Coherent transport • Transport under decoherence • Applications • FMO and other light harvesting complexes

  5. 1. Coherent transport in energy landscapes

  6. Coherent exciton transport • Tight-binding, single particle model • Three cases for different forms of En on infinite chains with constant nearest-neighbor coupling i. En =0: quantum walk ii.Enrandom: Anderson model iii. En =nF: Bloch oscillations

  7. Quantum random walk • Flat site energies: En =0 • Spatially extended eigenstates • Characteristic square root speedup over classical walks • Classical walks: • Quantum walks: • Quantum walks universal for quantum computing* Ballistic Reviews: quant-ph/0303081, quant-ph/0403120, quant-ph/0606016 *A. Childs, PRL 102, 180501 (2009)

  8. Anderson localization • Randomly chosen site energies En • Destroyed symmetry leads to localized eigenstates • Exponential localization • Different for N>1 dimensional • Initial transport ballistic like a quantum walk Ballistic Localized Reviews: Anderson, Rev Mod Phys 50, 191-201 (1978) Phillips, Annu Rev of Phys Chem44, 115-44 (1993)

  9. Stark localization • Linear energy bias: En =nF • Eigenstates in terms of Bessel functions • Factorial localization • Wannier-Stark ladder • Bloch oscillations with frequency F Reviews: Kolovsky and Korsch, cond-mat/0403205 Hartmann et al., New J Phys 6, 2 (2004)

  10. Origins of Stark localization Allowed energies Intuition • Conservation of energy • Quantum recurrence theorem Bocchieri & Loinger, Phys. Rev. 107, 337-339 (1957)

  11. Localization for arbitrary potentials • Allowed energies within En ±2Jn for arbitrary smooth potentials Serdyukova and Zakhariev, PRA 46, 58-62 (1992)

  12. Stark localization with disorder • Anderson and Stark localization are complementary Lubanet al., PRB 34, 3674-77 (1986) Kolovsky, PRL 101, 190602 (2008)

  13. Implications of Stark localization • Quantum particles on a lattice do not roll downhill • Energy funnels do not work • Different from continuous space wave packet • Discrete space and any variation in site energies leads to localization Discrete space Continuous space

  14. 2. Transport under decoherence in energy landscapes

  15. Dephasing assisted transport • Time-evolution with quantum master equation • Constant rate dephasing in the site basis (Haken-Strobl model) equivalent to continuous measurement • General result (Aspuru-Guzik and Plenio groups) • Low levels of dephasing allow for escape of the Anderson localization regime • High levels of dephasing suppress transport with the quantum Zeno effect Mohseniet al., arXiv:0805.2741, Rebentrostet al., 0807.0929, 0806.4725 Plenio and Huelga, 0807.4902, Caruso et al., 0901.4454

  16. Dephasing on Stark localized cold atoms in optical lattices • Pure dephasing arises from either • Spontaneous emission* • Coupling to equally populated bath of bosons under Bose-Hubbard model† • Analytic tight-binding result: diffusive transport at long times* • Achieving conduction requires finite temperature thermal bath† • Pure dephasing is at infinite temperature *Kolovsky et al., PRA66, 053405(2002) †Ponomarev et al., PRL 96, 050404 (2006)

  17. Stark localization under dephasing • Bloch oscillations fade to diffusive spreading • Holds even for quantum walks (F=0) Ballistic Diffusive Localized Kolovsky et al., PRA66, 053405 (2002)

  18. Anderson model under dephasing • Anderson model transitions to diffusive transport for any dephasing rate Ballistic Diffusive Localized

  19. Diffusion coefficients (as t → ∞) • No quantum speedup beyond localization length • Dephasing assisted transport is diffusive

  20. 3. Applications to light-harvesting complexes

  21. FMO as 1-D quantum walk Fenna-Matthews-Olson complex of green sulfur bacteria: Source 6 1 5 7 2 4 3 Trap Energies in cm-1 FMO Hamiltonian for C. Tepidum from J. Adolphs and T. Renger, Biophys J 91, 2778 (2006) FMO picture courtesy of Akihito Ishizaki

  22. Dephasing noise on FMO • No quantum speedup in FMO after ∼70 fs Ballistic Diffusive Localized Saturated 6 5 4,7 3 1,2 • Simulated using full Hamiltonian, constant dephasing rate, and trapping rate at site 3 of (1 ps)-1 • Similar results hold with no trap and/or initial excitation at site 1 • Model and temperature dependent dephasing rates from Rebentrostet al., arXiv:0807.0929

  23. Realistic noise on FMO • Results hold under more realistic noise models incorporating phonon dynamics in bath Ballistic Diffusive Localized Saturated 6 5 4,7 3 1,2 Unpublished data courtesy of Akihito Ishizaki Model from Ishizaki and Fleming, J. Chem. Phys. 130, 234111 (2009)

  24. LH2 LH1+RC Future work: Other systems LHCII of higher plants Dendrimers and binary trees Reaction center of purple bacteria 42 sites Hu et al., Q Rev Biophys 35, 1 (2002)

  25. Conclusions • Ordered or disordered site energies make coherent transport localized • Dephasing noise overcomes localization by allowing diffusion • Transport with non-constant site energies is always slower • Quantum speedup in FMO short lived (∼70 fs) • Properties of LHCs (disorder, funnel, dephasing) not suitable for scalable quantum walks

More Related