Pushing the Limits of Quantum Computing for Simulating PFAS Chemistry
Emil Dimitrov, Goar Sanchez-Sanz, James Nelson, Lee O'Riordan, Myles, Doyle, Sean Courtney, Venkatesh Kannan, Hassan Naseri, Alberto Garcia Garcia,, James Tricker, Marisa Faraggi, Joshua Goings, Luning Zhao

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates the application of quantum computing, specifically the VQE algorithm on a trapped-ion quantum computer, to simulate PFAS chemical reactions, showing promising near-term results and future potential.
Contribution
It introduces an integrated quantum chemistry pipeline combining HPC simulators and quantum hardware to simulate complex molecules like PFAS, advancing quantum computational chemistry.
Findings
Near-quantitative results with 11-qubit TFA model on IonQ Aria
Successful simulation of C-F bond breaking in PFAS
Demonstrates current capabilities and future potential of quantum computing in chemistry
Abstract
Accurate and scalable methods for computational quantum chemistry can accelerate research and development in many fields, ranging from drug discovery to advanced material design. Solving the electronic Schrodinger equation is the core problem of computational chemistry. However, the combinatorial complexity of this problem makes it intractable to find exact solutions, except for very small systems. The idea of quantum computing originated from this computational challenge in simulating quantum-mechanics. We propose an end-to-end quantum chemistry pipeline based on the variational quantum eigensolver (VQE) algorithm and integrated with both HPC-based simulators and a trapped-ion quantum computer. Our platform orchestrates hundreds of simulation jobs on compute resources to efficiently complete a set of ab initio chemistry experiments with a wide range of parameterization. Per- and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Computing Algorithms and Architecture · Parallel Computing and Optimization Techniques
