4.7 Article

Optimizing electronic structure simulations on a trapped-ion quantum computer using problem decomposition

Journal

COMMUNICATIONS PHYSICS
Volume 4, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s42005-021-00751-9

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Funding

  1. Dow
  2. 1QBit

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Problem decomposition methods can help overcome size limitations of quantum hardware for large-scale electronic structure simulations. Researchers demonstrated experimentally that decomposing a large molecule into smaller fragments can be applicable to currently available quantum computers, showcasing the potential of quantum hardware in material design and drug discovery.
Problem decomposition methods may help to overcome the size limitations of quantum hardware and allow largescale electronic structure simulations. Here, a method to simulate a ten-atom Hydrogen ring by decomposing it into smaller fragments that are amenable to a currently available trapped ion quantum computer is demonstrated experimentally. Quantum computers have the potential to advance material design and drug discovery by performing costly electronic structure calculations. A critical aspect of this application requires optimizing the limited resources of the quantum hardware. Here, we experimentally demonstrate an end-to-end pipeline that focuses on minimizing quantum resources while maintaining accuracy. Using density matrix embedding theory as a problem decomposition technique, and an ion-trap quantum computer, we simulate a ring of 10 hydrogen atoms without freezing any electrons. The originally 20-qubit system is decomposed into 10 two-qubit problems, making it amenable to currently available hardware. Combining this decomposition with a qubit coupled cluster circuit ansatz, circuit optimization, and density matrix purification, we accurately reproduce the potential energy curve in agreement with the full configuration interaction energy in the minimal basis set. Our experimental results are an early demonstration of the potential for problem decomposition to accurately simulate large molecules on quantum hardware.

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