Benchmarking adaptive variational quantum eigensolvers
Abstract
By design, the variational quantum eigensolver (VQE) strives to recover the lowest-energy eigenvalue of a given Hamiltonian by preparing quantum states guided by the variational principle. In practice, the prepared quantum state is indirectly assessed by the value of the associated energy. Novel adaptive derivative-assembled pseudo-trotter (ADAPT) ansatz approaches and recent formal advances now establish a clear connection between the theory of quantum chemistry and the quantum state ansatz used to solve the electronic structure problem. Here we benchmark the accuracy of VQE and ADAPT-VQE to calculate the electronic ground states and potential energy curves for a few selected diatomic molecules, namely H, NaH, and KH. Using numerical simulation, we find both methods provide good estimates of the energy and ground state, but only ADAPT-VQE proves to be robust to particularities in optimization methods. Another relevant finding is that gradient-based optimization is overall more economical and delivers superior performance than analogous simulations carried out with gradient-free optimizers. The results also identify small errors in the prepared state fidelity which show an increasing trend with molecular size.
Cite
@article{arxiv.2011.01279,
title = {Benchmarking adaptive variational quantum eigensolvers},
author = {Daniel Claudino and Jerimiah Wright and Alexander J. McCaskey and Travis S. Humble},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2011.01279},
year = {2021}
}
Comments
12 pages, 11 figures. Submitted to Frontiers in Chemistry special issue on Quantum Information and Quantum Computing for Chemical Systems