Quantum devices operate either continuously or via reciprocating cycles. Continuous devices include
solar cells,
thermoelectric devices (outputting current), and
lasers (outputting coherent light). Continuous refrigerators use
optical pumping or
laser cooling. Reciprocating devices, such as four-stroke or two-stroke machines, mimic classical engines with non-commuting strokes. Common cycles include the
Carnot cycle and
Otto cycle. The quantum framework allows to obtain from first principles equations of motion for the working medium. The dynamics of the cycle can be solved and a fixed point is sought. The performance characteristics can be calculated for example the power and the and
heat flux. The dynamical framework reveals the universal feature of the tradeoff between power and efficiency connecting to
Endoreversible thermodynamics.
Reciprocating Researchers studied quantum versions of thermodynamic cycles, including the
Carnot cycle,
Stirling cycle, and
Otto cycle. The Otto cycle serves as a model for other reciprocating cycles. in the Entropy \Omega plane, showing energy entropy and
Von Neumann entropy. \Omega represents the externally controlled internal frequency, mimicking inverse volume in the
Otto cycle. Red and blue lines indicate hot and cold isochores. The cycle represents a heat pump. The Otto cycle consists of four segments: • Segment A \rightarrow B: Isomagnetic or
isochoric process, partial equilibration with the cold reservoir, described by propagator U_\text{c}. • Segment B \rightarrow C:
Magnetization or
adiabatic compression, expanding energy level gaps in the
Hamiltonian, described by propagator U_\text{ch}. • Segment C \rightarrow D: Isomagnetic or isochoric process, partial equilibration with the hot reservoir, described by propagator U_\text{h}. • Segment D \rightarrow A:
Demagnetization or
adiabatic expansion, reducing energy gaps, described by propagator U_\text{hc}. The cycle's propagator is: U_\text{global} = U_\text{hc} U_\text{h} U_\text{ch} U_\text{c}. Propagators are linear operators that define the working medium's state. Consecutive propagators do not commute ([U_i, U_j] \ne 0), ensuring non-zero power. The working medium, such as spin systems or harmonic oscillators, requires optimized cycle time. At long cycle times (\tau_\text{cyc} \gg 2\pi/\omega), the engine operates quasi-adiabatically, with efficiency \eta = 1 - \frac{\omega_\text{c}}{\omega_\text{h}}, below
Carnot efficiency. At high temperatures, efficiency at maximum power is \eta = 1 - \sqrt{\frac{T_\text{c}}{T_\text{h}}}, matching
endoreversible thermodynamics. Optimal performance occurs when coherence is minimized. At very short cycle times (\tau_\text{cyc} \ll 2\pi/\omega), coherence enhances power. Allahverdyan, Hovhannisyan, and Mahler proposed a two-stroke quantum cycle using two
qubits with frequencies \omega_\text{h} and \omega_\text{c}. The first stroke partially equilibrates the qubits with hot and cold reservoirs. The second stroke swaps qubit states, preserving
entropy and generating power. Quantum Otto cycle refrigerators align with
magnetic refrigeration. A Quantum Carnot cycle with a
qubit as a working medium has been analyzed , demonstrating the quantum origin of the tradeoff between power and efficiency.
Continuous Continuous engines, analogous to
turbines, couple to an external periodic field, typically the electromagnetic field, modeling a
laser. three-level, four-level, and coupled
harmonic oscillators. Periodic driving splits the energy levels, enabling selective coupling to reservoirs and power production. Ignoring this splitting in equations of motion violates the
second law of thermodynamics. Scully proposed non-thermal fuels, such as coherence or squeezed thermal baths, to increase the hot reservoir's energy without raising entropy, complying with the second law. == Equivalence of heat machines ==