Daemonic quantum battery charged by thermalization
The reduced state of a small system strongly coupled to a charger in thermal equilibrium may be athermal and used as a small battery once disconnected. By harnessing the battery-charger correlations, the battery's extractable energy can increase above the ergotropy. We introduce a protocol that...
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Zusammenfassung: | The reduced state of a small system strongly coupled to a charger in thermal
equilibrium may be athermal and used as a small battery once disconnected. By
harnessing the battery-charger correlations, the battery's extractable energy
can increase above the ergotropy. We introduce a protocol that uses a quantum
system as a memory that measures the charger and leaves the battery intact in
its charged state. Using the information gained from the measurement, the
daemonic ergotropy of the battery is extracted. Then the battery is reconnected
to the charger, thermalizing and charging it. However, the memory should return
to its initial standard state to close the thermodynamic cycle. Thus, on the
one hand, the work cost of the cycle is the sum of the disconnecting and
reconnecting battery-charger work plus the measurement and erasure work. On the
other hand, the extracted energy is the daemonic ergotropy of the battery plus
the ergotropy of the memory. The ratio of these quantities defines the
efficiency of the cycle. The protocol is exemplified by a modified transverse
spin 1/2 Ising chain, one spin functioning as the battery and the others as the
charger. The memory is another auxiliary spin 1/2. We found pairs of
measurement schemes from which we extract the same daemonic ergotropy from the
battery, they dissipate the same amount of energy, and one leaves the memory in
an active state, the other in a passive state. We study the memory's ergotropy
and the daemonic ergotropy of the battery. We find that with measurements, the
efficiency can surpass that of the unmeasured protocol, given conditions on
temperature, coupling, and choice of the measurement operators. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2405.15949 |