Quantum annealing applied to ionic diffusion in solids
ORAL
Abstract
We have developed a framework for using quantum annealing computation to evaluate a key quantity in ionic diffusion in solids, the correlation factor. Existing methods can only calculate the correlation factor analytically in the case of physically unrealistic models, making it difficult to relate microstructural information about diffusion path networks obtainable by current ab initio techniques to macroscopic quantities such as diffusion coefficients. We have mapped the problem into a quantum spin system described by the Ising Hamiltonian. We have calculated the correlation factor in a simple case with a known exact result by a variety of computational methods, including simulated quantum annealing on the spin models, the classical random walk, the matrix description, and quantum annealing on D-Wave with hybrid solver . This comparison shows that all the evaluations give consistent results with each other, but that many of the conventional approaches require infeasible computational costs. By applying our framework in combination with ab initio technique, it is possible to understand how diffusion coefficients are controlled by temperatures, pressures, atomic substitutions, and other factors.
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Publication: K. Utimula, T. Ichibha, G. Prayogo, K. Hongo, K. Nakano and R. Maezono, Sci. Rep. 11, 7261 (2021).
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-86274-3
Presenters
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Ryo Maezono
- School of Information Science, JAIST
- School of Information Science, JAIST, Nomi, Ishikawa, Japan
- School of Information Science, JAIST, Nomi, Ishikawa, Japan.