System versus charger in performance optimization of quantum batteries
Rohit Kumar Shukla, Rajiv Kumar, Ujjwal Sen, and Sunil K. Mishra

TL;DR
This paper investigates how controlling the interplay between the battery and charger Hamiltonians can enhance energy storage and charging power in quantum batteries, revealing that suppressing the battery's influence improves performance.
Contribution
It introduces a tunable parameter to suppress the battery's intrinsic influence, systematically studying its effect on energy transfer and optimizing quantum battery performance.
Findings
Suppressing the battery's influence increases stored energy.
Controllable counteraction improves charging power.
Enhanced performance across various configurations.
Abstract
Quantum batteries have emerged as promising devices that work within the quantum regime and provide energy storage and power delivery. In this work, we explore the interplay between the battery and charger Hamiltonians, focusing on controlling and minimizing the batterys intrinsic influence during the charging process. To this end, we introduce a tunable parameter that allows partial suppression of the batterys contribution, enabling a systematic study of its role in energy transfer. We examine several charging configurations: a non-interacting qubit battery driven by an interacting many-body charger, an interacting qubit battery energized by a non-interacting charger, and setups in which both the battery and the charger are interacting qubit chains. In all cases, the inclusion of a controllable counteraction, or anti-effect of the battery Hamiltonian, allows us to modulate the batterys…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Thermodynamics and Statistical Mechanics · Advanced battery technologies research · Quantum many-body systems
