Quantum Computing in the Computational Landscape of Power Electronics: Vision and Reality
Nikolaos G. Paterakis, Petros Karamanakos, Corey O'Meara, Georgios Papafotiou

TL;DR
This paper explores the potential of quantum computing to revolutionize power electronics by addressing complex optimization problems, demonstrating initial implementations on quantum hardware, and outlining a future integration pathway.
Contribution
It provides a visionary perspective on applying quantum computing to power electronics, including a tutorial, a pioneering quantum optimization demonstration, and a strategic outlook.
Findings
Quantum algorithms can address large-scale optimization problems in power electronics.
Initial quantum hardware experiments demonstrate feasibility despite current limitations.
The paper outlines a future where quantum computing becomes integral to power electronics design.
Abstract
Quantum computing is rapidly emerging as a promising technology for solving complex optimization problems that arise in various engineering fields. Therefore, it holds significant promise to transform the computational foundations of power electronics. Motivated by this potential, this paper adopts a visionary perspective to examine how quantum computing could influence the evolution of power electronics in areas such as converter design, control, modulation, simulation workflows, and beyond. Within this framework, the current status, limitations, and anticipated progress of quantum algorithms and hardware are discussed, together with their potential to enable efficient solutions to large-scale, multiobjective, mixed-integer optimization problems. To place these developments in context, the paper begins with a concise tutorial on fundamental concepts in quantum computing, serving as…
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