| Literature DB >> 31165732 |
Kaonan Micadei1,2, John P S Peterson3, Alexandre M Souza3, Roberto S Sarthour3, Ivan S Oliveira3, Gabriel T Landi4, Tiago B Batalhão5,6, Roberto M Serra7,8, Eric Lutz2.
Abstract
Heat spontaneously flows from hot to cold in standard thermodynamics. However, the latter theory presupposes the absence of initial correlations between interacting systems. We here experimentally demonstrate the reversal of heat flow for two quantum correlated spins-1/2, initially prepared in local thermal states at different effective temperatures, employing a Nuclear Magnetic Resonance setup. We observe a spontaneous energy flow from the cold to the hot system. This process is enabled by a trade off between correlations and entropy that we quantify with information-theoretical quantities. These results highlight the subtle interplay of quantum mechanics, thermodynamics and information theory. They further provide a mechanism to control heat on the microscale.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31165732 PMCID: PMC6549171 DOI: 10.1038/s41467-019-10333-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919
Fig. 1Schematic of the experimental setup. a Heat flows from the hot to the cold spin (at thermal contact) when both are initially uncorrelated. This corresponds to standard thermodynamic. For initially quantum-correlated spins, heat is spontaneously transferred from the cold to the hot spin. The direction of heat flow is here reversed. b View of the magnetometer used in our NMR experiment. A superconducting magnet, producing a high-intensity magnetic field (B0) in the longitudinal direction, is immersed in a thermally shielded vessel in liquid He, surrounded by liquid N in another vacuum separated chamber. The sample is placed at the center of the magnet within the radio-frequency coil of the probe head inside a 5-mm glass tube. c Experimental pulse sequence for the partial thermalization process. The blue (black) circle represents x (y) rotations by the indicated angle. The orange connections represents a free evolution under the scalar coupling, , between the 1H and 13C nuclear spins during the time indicated above the symbol. We have performed 22 samplings of the interaction time τ in the interval 0 to 2.32 ms
Fig. 2Dynamics of heat, correlations, and entropic quantities. a Internal energy of qubit A along the partial thermalization process. b Internal energy of qubit B. In the absence of initial correlations, the hot qubit A cools down and the cold qubit B heats up (cyan circles in panel a and b). By contrast, in the presence of initial quantum correlations, the heat current is reversed as the hot qubit A gains and the cold qubit B loses energy (orange squares in panel a and b). This reversal is made possible by a decrease of the mutual information c and of the geometric quantum discord d. Different entropic contributions to the heat current (5) in the uncorrelated e and uncorrelated f case. Reversal occurs when the negative variation of the mutual information, ΔI(A:B), compensates the positive entropy productions, and , of the respective qubits. The symbols represent experimental data and the dashed lines are numerical simulations. Error bars were estimated by a Monte Carlo sampling from the standard deviation of the measured data (Supplementary Information)