Atom-doped photon engine: Extracting mechanical work from a quantum system via radiation pressure
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Show full item recordEditorial
American Physical Society
Date
2024-02-29Referencia bibliográfica
Álvaro Tejero, Daniel Manzano, and Pablo I. Hurtado. Atom-doped photon engine: Extracting mechanical work from a quantum system via radiation pressure. Phys. Rev. E 109, 024141 (2023) [10.1103/PhysRevE.109.024141]
Sponsorship
Fellowship FPU20/02835 and the Projects of I + D + i Ref. PID2020-113681GB-I00, Ref. PID2021-128970OA-I00, C-EXP-251-UGR23, financed by MICIN/AEI/10.13039/501100011033 and FEDER “A way to make Europe”; Projects Ref. A-FQM-175-UGR18, Ref. P20_00173, and Ref. A-FQM-644-UGR20 financed by the Spanish Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades and European Regional Development Fund, Junta de Andalucía-Consejería de Economía y Conocimiento 2014-2020; Ministry for Digital Transformation and of Civil Service of the Spanish Government through the QUANTUM ENIA project call - Quantum Spain project; European Union through the Recovery, Transformation and Resilience Plan - NextGenerationEU within the framework of the Digital Spain 2026 AgendaAbstract
The possibility of efficiently converting heat into work at themicroscale has triggered an intense research effort
to understand quantum heat engines, driven by the hope of quantum superiority over classical counterparts. In this
work, we introduce a model featuring an atom-doped optical quantum cavity propelling a classical piston through
radiation pressure. The model, based on the Jaynes-Cummings Hamiltonian of quantum electrodynamics,
demonstrates the generation of mechanical work through thermal energy injection. We establish the equivalence
of the piston expansion work with Alicki’s work definition, analytically for quasistatic transformations and
numerically for finite-time protocols. We further employ the model to construct quantum Otto and Carnot
engines, comparing their performance in terms of energetics, work output, efficiency, and power under various
conditions. This model thus provides a platform to extract useful work from an open quantum system to generate
net motion, and it sheds light on the quantum concepts of work and heat.