Quantum-catalysis-enhanced extractable energy in a qubit quantum battery
Shun-Cai Zhao

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that a harmonic-oscillator catalyst can induce negative energy flux in a driven qubit quantum battery, counteracting decoherence and significantly enhancing the maximum extractable work in noisy environments.
Contribution
It reveals the thermodynamic mechanism of transient negative energy flux induced by a catalyst, leading to improved energy storage in quantum batteries under realistic conditions.
Findings
Catalyst induces transient negative energy flux into the qubit.
Negative energy flux counteracts decoherence, increasing ergotropy.
Quantitative link established between energy flux and ergotropy gain.
Abstract
In realistic open-system environments, decoherence and dissipation naturally drive quantum batteries toward passive states, thereby limiting their maximum extractable work (ergotropy). While quantum catalysis has been proposed to mitigate this degradation, the underlying thermodynamic mechanism remains not fully understood. Here, we investigate a driven qubit quantum battery coherently coupled to a harmonic-oscillator catalyst, subject to simultaneous dephasing and dissipation. By employing the differential first law of open quantum thermodynamics, we analyzed the dynamic energy balance to separate work and heat contributions during the charging process. We find that the catalyst induces a transient negative energy flux (energy backflow) into the qubit. This backflow actively counteracts decoherence-induced passivation and drives the battery into highly non-passive states, resulting in…
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