Extracting work from quantum systems
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We consider the task of extracting work from quantum systems in the resource theory perspective of thermodynamics, where free states are arbitrary thermal states, and allowed operations are energy conserving unitary transformations. Taking as our work storage system a 'weight' we prove the second law and then present simple protocols which extract average work equal to the free energy change of the system - the same amount as in classical thermodynamics. Crucially, for systems in 'classical' states (mixtures of energy eigenstates) our protocol works on a single copy of the system. This is in sharp contrast to previous results, which showed that in case of almost-deterministic work extraction, collective actions on multiple copies are necessary to extract the free energy. This establishes the fact that free energy is a meaningful notion even for individual systems in classical states. However, for non-classical states, where coherences between energy levels exist, we prove that collective actions are necessary, so long as no external sources of coherence are used.
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Forward citations
Cited by 2 Pith papers
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Thermodynamic limits of the Mpemba effect: A unified resource theory analysis of correlation-enabled mechanisms
Correlations enable the Mpemba effect in a resource theory framework but are necessary yet insufficient depending on distribution and parameters, explaining sporadic experimental observations.
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Quantum thermodynamics with coherence: Covariant Gibbs-preserving operation is characterized by the free energy
Covariant Gibbs-preserving operations are characterized by free energy for coherent states with correlated catalysts; covariance adds no extra constraint on convertibility for coherent distillable states.
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