Testing a Quantum Heat Pump with a Two-Level Spin

Once in its non-equilibrium steady state, a nanoscale system coupled to several heat baths may be thought of as a “quantum heat pump”. Depending on the direction of its stationary heat flows, it may function as, e.g., a refrigerator or a heat transformer. These continuous heat devices can be arbitra...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Luis A. Correa, Mohammad Mehboudi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2016-04-01
Series:Entropy
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/1099-4300/18/4/141
id doaj-03590e6a22604785908dc0a5542b2d38
record_format Article
spelling doaj-03590e6a22604785908dc0a5542b2d382020-11-25T00:03:46ZengMDPI AGEntropy1099-43002016-04-0118414110.3390/e18040141e18040141Testing a Quantum Heat Pump with a Two-Level SpinLuis A. Correa0Mohammad Mehboudi1Unitat de Física Teòrica, Informació i Fenòmens Quàntics, Departament de Física, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, Barcelona 08193, SpainUnitat de Física Teòrica, Informació i Fenòmens Quàntics, Departament de Física, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, Barcelona 08193, SpainOnce in its non-equilibrium steady state, a nanoscale system coupled to several heat baths may be thought of as a “quantum heat pump”. Depending on the direction of its stationary heat flows, it may function as, e.g., a refrigerator or a heat transformer. These continuous heat devices can be arbitrarily complex multipartite systems, and yet, their working principle is always the same: they are made up of several elementary three-level stages operating in parallel. As a result, it is possible to devise external “black-box” testing strategies to learn about their functionality and performance regardless of any internal details. In particular, one such heat pump can be tested by coupling a two-level spin to one of its “contact transitions”. The steady state of this external probe contains information about the presence of heat leaks and internal dissipation in the device and, also, about the direction of its steady-state heat currents. Provided that the irreversibility of the heat pump is low, one can further estimate its coefficient of performance. These techniques may find applications in the emerging field of quantum thermal engineering, as they facilitate the diagnosis and design optimization of complex thermodynamic cycles.http://www.mdpi.com/1099-4300/18/4/141thermodynamicsopen quantum systemsthermal engineering
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Luis A. Correa
Mohammad Mehboudi
spellingShingle Luis A. Correa
Mohammad Mehboudi
Testing a Quantum Heat Pump with a Two-Level Spin
Entropy
thermodynamics
open quantum systems
thermal engineering
author_facet Luis A. Correa
Mohammad Mehboudi
author_sort Luis A. Correa
title Testing a Quantum Heat Pump with a Two-Level Spin
title_short Testing a Quantum Heat Pump with a Two-Level Spin
title_full Testing a Quantum Heat Pump with a Two-Level Spin
title_fullStr Testing a Quantum Heat Pump with a Two-Level Spin
title_full_unstemmed Testing a Quantum Heat Pump with a Two-Level Spin
title_sort testing a quantum heat pump with a two-level spin
publisher MDPI AG
series Entropy
issn 1099-4300
publishDate 2016-04-01
description Once in its non-equilibrium steady state, a nanoscale system coupled to several heat baths may be thought of as a “quantum heat pump”. Depending on the direction of its stationary heat flows, it may function as, e.g., a refrigerator or a heat transformer. These continuous heat devices can be arbitrarily complex multipartite systems, and yet, their working principle is always the same: they are made up of several elementary three-level stages operating in parallel. As a result, it is possible to devise external “black-box” testing strategies to learn about their functionality and performance regardless of any internal details. In particular, one such heat pump can be tested by coupling a two-level spin to one of its “contact transitions”. The steady state of this external probe contains information about the presence of heat leaks and internal dissipation in the device and, also, about the direction of its steady-state heat currents. Provided that the irreversibility of the heat pump is low, one can further estimate its coefficient of performance. These techniques may find applications in the emerging field of quantum thermal engineering, as they facilitate the diagnosis and design optimization of complex thermodynamic cycles.
topic thermodynamics
open quantum systems
thermal engineering
url http://www.mdpi.com/1099-4300/18/4/141
work_keys_str_mv AT luisacorrea testingaquantumheatpumpwithatwolevelspin
AT mohammadmehboudi testingaquantumheatpumpwithatwolevelspin
_version_ 1725432128328433664