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A quantum heat engine is a device that generates power from the heat flow between hot and cold reservoirs. The operation mechanism of the engine can be described by the laws of quantum mechanics. The first realization of a quantum heat engine was pointed out by Geusic, Schultz-DuBois and Scoville., showing the connection of efficiency of the Carnot engine and the 3-level maser. Quantum refrigerators share the structure of quantum heat engines with the purpose of pumping heat from a cold to a hot bath consuming power first suggested by Geusic, Bois and Scoville . When the power is supplied by a laser the process is termed optical pumping or laser cooling, suggested by Weinland and Hench . Surprisingly heat engines and refrigerators can operate up to the scale of a single particle thus justifying the need for a quantum theory termed quantum thermodynamics.
Contents
- The 3 level amplifier as a quantum heat engine
- Types of quantum heat engines and refrigerators
- The quantum reciprocating heat engine and refrigerator
- Continuous quantum engines
- Equivalence of reciprocating and continuous heat machines in the quantum regime
- Heat engines and open quantum systems
- The quantum absorption refrigerator
- Quantum refrigerators and the third law of thermodynamics
- References
The 3-level amplifier as a quantum heat engine
The three-level-amplifier is the template of a quantum device. It operates by employing a hot and cold bath to maintain population inversion between two energy levels which is used to amplify light by stimulated emission The ground state level (1-g) and the excited level (3-h) are coupled to a hot bath of temperature
where
The device operates as an amplifier when levels (3-h) and (2-c) are coupled to an external field of frequency
Amplification of the field is possible only for positive gain (population inversion)
where
Reversing the operation driving heat from the cold bath to the hot bath by consuming power constitutes a refrigerator. The efficiency of the refrigerator defined as the coefficient of performance (COP) for the reversed device is:
Types of quantum heat engines and refrigerators
Quantum devices can operate either continuously or by a reciprocating cycle. Continuous devices include solar cells converting solar radiation to electrical power, thermoelectric where the output is current and lasers where the output power is coherent light. The primary example of a continuous refrigerator is optical pumping and laser cooling . Similarly to classical reciprocating engines, quantum heat engines also have a cycle that is divided into different strokes. A stroke is time segment in which a certain operation takes place (e.g. thermalization, or work extraction). Two adjacent strokes do not commute with each other. The most common reciprocating heat machines are the four-stroke machine, and the two-stroke machine. Reciprocating devices have been suggested operating either by the Carnot cycle or the Otto cycle In both types the quantum description allows to obtain equation of motion for the working medium and the heat flow from the reservoirs.
The quantum reciprocating heat engine and refrigerator
Quantum versions of most of the common thermodynamical cycles have been studied, for example the Carnot cycle , Stirling cycle and Otto cycle
The Otto cycle can serve as a template for other reciprocating cycles.
It is composed of the following four segments:
The propagator of the four stroke cycle becomes
The propagators are linear operators defined on a vector space which completely determines the state of the working medium. Common to all thermodynamical cycles the consecutive segment propagators do not commute
In a reciprocating quantum heat engine the working medium is a quantum system such as spin systems or an harmonic oscillator . For maximum power the cycle time should be optimized. There are two basic timescales in the reciprocating refrigerator the cycle time
For shorter cycle times the working medium cannot follow adiabatically the change in the external parameter. This leads to friction-like phenomena. Extra power is required to drive the system faster. The signature of such dynamics is the development of coherence causing extra dissipation. Surprisingly the dynamics leading to friction is quantized meaning that frictionless solutions to the adiabatic expansion/compression can be found in finite time. As a result optimization has to be carried out only with respect to the time allocated to heat transport. In this regime the quantum feature of coherence degrades the performance. Optimal frictionless performance is obtained when the coherence can be cancelled.
The shortest cycle times
A two-stroke engine quantum cycle equivalent to the Otto cycle based on two qubits has been proposed. The first qubit has frequency
The quantum Otto cycle refrigerators shares the same cycle with Magnetic refrigeration
Continuous quantum engines
Continuous quantum engines are the quantum analogues of turbines. The work output mechanism is coupling to an external periodic field, typically the electromagnetic field. Thus the heat engine is a model for a laser. The models differ by the choice of their working substance and heat source and sink. Externally driven two-level, three level four-level and coupled harmonic oscillators have been studied.
The periodic driving splits the energy level structure of the working medium. This splitting allows the two level engine to couple selectively to the hot and cold baths and produce power. On the other hand ignoring this splitting in the derivation of the equation of motion will violate the second law of thermodynamics.
Non thermal fuels have been considered for quantum heat engines. The idea is to increase the energy content of the hot bath without increasing its entropy. This can be achieved by employing coherence or a squeezed thermal bath. It should be noted that these devices do not violate the second law of thermodynamics.
Equivalence of reciprocating and continuous heat machines in the quantum regime
Two-stroke, Four-stroke, and continuous machine are very different from each other. However it was shown that there is a quantum regime where all these machines become thermodynamically equivalent to each other. While the intra cycle dynamics in the equivalence regime is very different in different engine types, when the cycle is completed they all turn out to provide the same amount of work and consume the same amount of heat (hence they share the same efficiency as well). This equivalence is a associated with a coherent work extraction mechanism and has no classical analogue.
Heat engines and open quantum systems
The elementary example operates under quasi equilibrium conditions. Its main quantum feature is the discrete energy level structure. More realistic devices operate out of equilibrium possessing friction heat leaks and finite heat flow. Quantum thermodynamics supplies a dynamical theory required for systems out of equilibrium such as heat engines, thus, inserting dynamics into thermodynamics. The theory of open quantum systems constitutes the basic theory. For heat engines a reduced description of the dynamics of the working substance is sought, tracing out the hot and cold baths. The starting point is the general Hamiltonian of the combined systems:
and the system Hamiltonian
where
leading to the dynamical version of the first law of thermodynamics:
The rate of entropy production becomes:
The global structure of quantum mechanics is reflected in the derivation of the reduced description. A derivation which is consistent with the laws of thermodynamics is based on the weak coupling limit. A thermodynamical idealization assumes that the system and the baths are uncorrelated, meaning that the total state of the combined system becomes a tensor product at all times:
Under these conditions the dynamical equations of motion become:
The quantum absorption refrigerator
The absorption refrigerator is of unique importance in setting an autonomous quantum device. Such a device requires no external power and operates without external intervention in scheduling the operations . The basic construct includes three baths a power bath, a hot and cold baths. The tricycle model is the template for the absorption refrigerator.
The tricycle engine has a generic structure. The basic model consists of three thermal baths: A hot bath with temperature
Each bath is connected to the engine via a frequency filter which can be modeled by three oscillators:
where
The device operates as a refrigerator by removing an excitation from the cold bath as well as from the work bath and generating an excitation in the hot bath. The term
where
The first-law of thermodynamics represents the energy balance of heat currents originating from the three baths and collimating on the system:
At steady state no heat is accumulated in the tricycle, thus
This version of the second-law is a generalisation of the statement of Clausius theorem; heat does not flow spontaneously from cold to hot bodies. When the temperature
Quantum refrigerators and the third law of thermodynamics
There are seemingly two independent formulations of the third law of thermodynamics both originally were stated by Walther Nernst. The first formulation is known as the Nernst heat theorem, and can be phrased as:
The second formulation is dynamical, known as the unattainability principle
At steady state the second law of thermodynamics implies that the total entropy production is non-negative. When the cold bath approaches the absolute zero temperature, it is necessary to eliminate the entropy production divergence at the cold side when
For
The second formulation, known as the unattainability principle can be rephrased as;
The dynamics of the cooling process is governed by the equation
where
This equation introduce the relation between the characteristic exponents