Hunting for quantum advantage in electronic structure calculations is a highly non-trivial task
\"Ors Legeza, Andor Menczer, Mikl\'os Antal Werner, Sotiris S. Xantheas, Frank Neese, Martin Ganahl, Cole Brower, Samuel Rodriguez Bernabeu, Jeff Hammond, John Gunnels

TL;DR
This paper presents high-accuracy classical benchmark results for complex electronic structure problems, emphasizing the importance of classical methods like DMRG in validating quantum advantage claims in quantum chemistry.
Contribution
It provides state-of-the-art classical DMRG benchmark data for challenging molecular systems, highlighting the role of classical computing in quantum advantage validation.
Findings
Achieved ground state energy for Fe4S4 with CAS(54,36)
Performed orbital optimizations for Fe5S12H4 with CAS(89,102)
Utilized GPU-accelerated DMRG with mixed precision for large active spaces
Abstract
In light of major developments over the past decades in both quantum computing and simulations on classical hardware, it is a serious challenge to identify a real-world problem where quantum advantage is expected to appear. In quantum chemistry, electronic structure calculations of strongly correlated, i.e. multi-reference problems, are often argued to fall into such category because of their intractability with standard methods based on mean-field theory. Therefore, providing state-of-the-art benchmark data by classical algorithms is necessary to make a decisive conclusion when such competing development directions are compared. We report cutting-edge performance results together with high accuracy ground state energy for the FeS molecular cluster on a CAS(54,36) model space, a problem that has been included quite recently among the list of systems in the {\it Quantum Advantage…
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