| Literature DB >> 26445899 |
Abstract
The laws of thermodynamics put limits to the efficiencies of thermal machines. Analogues of these laws are now established for quantum engines weakly and passively coupled to the environment providing a framework to find improvements to their performance. Systems whose interaction with the environment is actively controlled do not fall in that framework. Here we consider systems actively and locally coupled to the environment, evolving with a so-called boundary-driven Lindblad equation. Starting from a unitary description of the system plus the environment we simultaneously obtain the Lindblad equation and the appropriate expressions for heat, work and entropy-production of the system extending the framework for the analysis of new, and some already proposed, quantum heat engines. We illustrate our findings in spin 1/2 chains and explain why an XX chain coupled in this way to a single heat bath relaxes to thermodynamic-equilibrium while and XY chain does not. Additionally, we show that an XX chain coupled to a left and a right heat baths behaves as a quantum engine, a heater or refrigerator depending on the parameters, with efficiencies bounded by Carnot efficiencies.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26445899 PMCID: PMC4597202 DOI: 10.1038/srep14873
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1As a function of time t plots of (blue), (black) and diS/dt (red) for an XX (J = 1 = J) and (blue, dashed), (back, dashed) and −diS/dt (red, dashed) for an XY (J = 1 = 0.5J) chain. In both cases, the chain has N = 5 sites with h = 1, i = 1,5 coupled with λ = 1 to a single left bath of β = 1 and h = 1.
Figure 2For a N = 5 site XX chain with J = J = 3, h2 = h3 = h4 = 5, h5 = hR = 2, β = 0.8, β = 1.2, and λ = 1, we depict , and as a function of h = h1.
There are two special values for h. At h = 3, where , all quantities vanish (equilibrium state). At , and thus (non-driven steady state).