Thermodynamics of quantum coherence
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Quantum decoherence is seen as an undesired source of irreversibility that destroys quantum resources. Quantum coherences seem to be a property that vanishes at thermodynamic equilibrium. Away from equilibrium, quantum coherences challenge the classical notions of a thermodynamic bath in a Carnot engines, affect the efficiency of quantum transport, lead to violations of Fourier's law, and can be used to dynamically control the temperature of a state. However, the role of quantum coherence in thermodynamics is not fully understood. Here we show that the relative entropy of a state with quantum coherence with respect to its decohered state captures its deviation from thermodynamic equilibrium. As a result, changes in quantum coherence can lead to a heat flow with no associated temperature, and affect the entropy production rate. From this, we derive a quantum version of the Onsager reciprocal relations that shows that there is a reciprocal relation between thermodynamic forces from coherence and quantum transport. Quantum decoherence can be useful and offers new possibilities of thermodynamic control for quantum transport.
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Cited by 2 Pith papers
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Resource theory of coherence in continuous position basis from measurement-induced dephasing
A resource theory of coherence is built for continuous position states via a measurement-induced dephasing channel whose fixed-point set contains no normal states, yielding a relative-entropy quantifier that satisfies...
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Resource theory of coherence in continuous position basis from measurement-induced dephasing
Develops a resource-theoretic framework for coherence in continuous position basis using a measurement-induced dephasing channel, defining quantifiers, witnesses, and an application to Gaussian wavepackets in gravitat...
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