We investigate, theoretically and experimentally, the thermodynamic performance of a minimal three-qubit heat-bath algorithmic cooling refrigerator. We analytically compute the coefficient of performance, the cooling power and the polarization of the target qubit for an arbitrary number of cycles, taking realistic experimental imperfections into account. We determine their fundamental upper bounds in the ideal reversible limit and show that these values may be experimentally approached using a system of three qubits in a nitrogen-vacancy center in diamond.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures. With supplemental material of 6 pages, 4 figures. Content of published versio
This is the final version. Available from American Physical Society via the DOI in this recordThe di...
The third law of thermodynamics, also known as the Nernst unattainability principle, puts a fundamen...
Quantum technologies require pure states, which are often generated by extreme refrigeration. Heat-b...
We design a measurement-based quantum refrigerator with an arbitrary number of qubits situated in a ...
cooling, absolute zero temperature Quantum thermodynamics supplies a consistent description of quant...
This is the final version. Available from American Physical Society via the DOI in this recordAn imp...
The derivation of general performance benchmarks is important in the design of highly optimized heat...
In classical thermodynamics the work cost of control can typically be neglected. On the contrary, in...
Algorithmic cooling is a potentially important technique for making scalable NMR quantum computation...
A single qutrit with transitions selectively driven by weakly-coupled reservoirs can implement one o...
We have made a simple and natural modification of a recent quantum refrigerator model presented by C...
The emergence of the laws of thermodynamics from the laws of quantum mechanics is an unresolved issu...
We demonstrate that a quantum absorption refrigerator (QAR) can be realized from the smallest quantu...
This is the final version. Available on open access from MDPI via the DOI in this reocrdThe ability ...
Cooling quantum systems is arguably one of the most important thermodynamic tasks connected to moder...
This is the final version. Available from American Physical Society via the DOI in this recordThe di...
The third law of thermodynamics, also known as the Nernst unattainability principle, puts a fundamen...
Quantum technologies require pure states, which are often generated by extreme refrigeration. Heat-b...
We design a measurement-based quantum refrigerator with an arbitrary number of qubits situated in a ...
cooling, absolute zero temperature Quantum thermodynamics supplies a consistent description of quant...
This is the final version. Available from American Physical Society via the DOI in this recordAn imp...
The derivation of general performance benchmarks is important in the design of highly optimized heat...
In classical thermodynamics the work cost of control can typically be neglected. On the contrary, in...
Algorithmic cooling is a potentially important technique for making scalable NMR quantum computation...
A single qutrit with transitions selectively driven by weakly-coupled reservoirs can implement one o...
We have made a simple and natural modification of a recent quantum refrigerator model presented by C...
The emergence of the laws of thermodynamics from the laws of quantum mechanics is an unresolved issu...
We demonstrate that a quantum absorption refrigerator (QAR) can be realized from the smallest quantu...
This is the final version. Available on open access from MDPI via the DOI in this reocrdThe ability ...
Cooling quantum systems is arguably one of the most important thermodynamic tasks connected to moder...
This is the final version. Available from American Physical Society via the DOI in this recordThe di...
The third law of thermodynamics, also known as the Nernst unattainability principle, puts a fundamen...
Quantum technologies require pure states, which are often generated by extreme refrigeration. Heat-b...