Collective dynamics versus entanglement in quantum battery performance
Rohit Kumar Shukla, Sunil K. Mishra, and Ujjwal Sen

TL;DR
This paper investigates whether enhanced quantum battery performance is due to entanglement or collective dynamics, finding that collective coherence, not entanglement, primarily drives charging efficiency.
Contribution
The study distinguishes between entanglement and collective coherence, showing that peak charging power is driven by coherent dynamics rather than entanglement alone.
Findings
Peak power occurs before significant entanglement develops.
Fully collective interactions involve all particles and enhance performance.
Partially extended interactions do not improve performance significantly.
Abstract
Identifying the origin of enhanced charging performance in many-body quantum batteries remains a central challenge in quantum thermodynamics. It is unclear whether improvements in stored energy and instantaneous charging power stem from genuinely quantum correlations, such as entanglement, or from coherent collective dynamics, in which energy is transferred through the battery by many particles acting together in a coordinated, phase-preserving manner. Here, we address this question by comparing the time evolution of energy and a hierarchy of entanglement measures probing bipartite, tripartite, and multipartite correlations. Across diverse battery charger configurations, the instantaneous power peaks early, before significant entanglement develops, indicating that peak charging is dominated by coherent collective transport. Further analysis of k-local interactions under fair constraints…
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