Optimal Performance of Quantum Refrigerators
Tova Feldmann, Ronnie Kosloff

TL;DR
This paper investigates the fundamental limits of cooling in quantum refrigerators, showing that energy gaps and noise prevent reaching absolute zero, and identifies frictionless cycles that can theoretically achieve zero temperature.
Contribution
It introduces a quantum Otto cycle model with an energy gap, analyzes nonadiabatic dynamics and quantum friction, and finds conditions for frictionless cycles capable of reaching zero temperature.
Findings
Energy gaps prevent cooling to absolute zero.
Frictionless cycles minimize entropy production.
External noise limits the minimum achievable temperature.
Abstract
A reciprocating quantum refrigerator is studied with the purpose of determining the limitations of cooling to absolute zero. We find that if the energy spectrum of the working medium possesses an uncontrollable gap, then there is a minimum achievable temperature above zero. Such a gap, combined with a negligible amount of noise, prevents adiabatic following during the demagnetization stage which is the necessary condition for reaching . The refrigerator is based on an Otto cycle where the working medium is an interacting spin system with an energy gap. For this system the external control Hamiltonian does not commute with the internal interaction. As a result during the demagnetization and magnetization segments of the operating cycle the system cannot follow adiabatically the temporal change in the energy levels. We connect the nonadiabatic dynamics to quantum friction. An…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Thermodynamics and Statistical Mechanics · Quantum Information and Cryptography
