Molecular Symmetry in VQE: A Dual Approach for Trapped-Ion Simulations of Benzene
Understanding complex chemical systems -- such as biomolecules, catalysts, and novel materials -- is a central goal of quantum simulations. Near-term strategies hinge on the use of variational quantum eigensolver (VQE) algorithms combined with a suitable ansatz. However, straightforward application...
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Zusammenfassung: | Understanding complex chemical systems -- such as biomolecules, catalysts,
and novel materials -- is a central goal of quantum simulations. Near-term
strategies hinge on the use of variational quantum eigensolver (VQE) algorithms
combined with a suitable ansatz. However, straightforward application of many
chemically-inspired ansatze yields prohibitively deep circuits. In this work,
we employ several circuit optimization methods tailored for trapped-ion quantum
devices to enhance the feasibility of intricate chemical simulations. The
techniques aim to lessen the depth of the unitary coupled cluster with singles
and doubles (uCCSD) ansatz's circuit compilation, a considerable challenge on
current noisy quantum devices. Furthermore, we use symmetry-inspired classical
post-selection methods to further refine the outcomes and minimize errors in
energy measurements, without adding quantum overhead. Our strategies encompass
optimal mapping from orbital to qubit, term reordering to minimize entangling
gates, and the exploitation of molecular spin and point group symmetry to
eliminate redundant parameters. The inclusion of error mitigation via
post-selection based on known molecular symmetries improves the results to near
milli-Hartree accuracy. These methods, when applied to a benzene molecule
simulation, enabled the construction of an 8-qubit circuit with 69 two-qubit
entangling operations, pushing the limits for variational quantum eigensolver
(VQE) circuits executed on quantum hardware to date. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2308.00667 |