Thermodynamics of quantum systems under dynamical control
D. Gelbwaser-Klimovsky, Wolfgang Niedenzu, Gershon Kurizki

TL;DR
This review explores how periodically-driven quantum systems can function as heat engines or refrigerators, revealing new thermodynamic bounds and resource advantages in quantum control and non-Markovian regimes.
Contribution
It introduces a model of quantum heat machines with periodic modulation, analyzing efficiency, power bounds, and the impact of quantum states and correlations on thermodynamic performance.
Findings
Quantum heat machines can reach Carnot efficiency with external modulation.
Refrigeration rates may not vanish near absolute zero for certain quantum baths.
System-bath correlations enable more work extraction than classical limits.
Abstract
In this review the debated rapport between thermodynamics and quantum mechanics is addressed in the framework of the theory of periodically-driven/controlled quantum-thermodynamic machines. The basic model studied here is that of a two-level system (TLS), whose energy is periodically modulated while the system is coupled to thermal baths. When the modulation interval is short compared to the bath memory time, the system-bath correlations are affected, thereby causing cooling or heating of the TLS, depending on the interval. In steady state, a periodically-modulated TLS coupled to two distinct baths constitutes the simplest quantum heat machine (QHM) that may operate as either an engine or a refrigerator, depending on the modulation rate. We find their efficiency and power-output bounds and the conditions for attaining these bounds. An extension of this model to multilevel systems shows…
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