Sample-based quantum diagonalization as parallel fragment solver for the localized active space self-consistent field method

ORAL

Abstract

Accurately and efficiently describing strongly correlated electronic systems is a central challenge in quantum computational chemistry, with classical and quantum computers. The localized active space self-consistent field method (LASSCF) uses a product of fragment active spaces as a variational space, with the Schrödinger equation solved exactly in each fragment and the fragment active-space orbitals defined in a self-consistent manner. LASSCF is accurate for systems with strong intra-fragment and weak inter-fragment correlation, and its computational cost is combinatorial with respect to the size of the individual fragment active spaces, rather than their product. However, exactly solving the Schrödinger equation in each fragment remains a substantial bottleneck. Here, we address the possibility of solving the fragment active space Schrödinger equation with approximate methods, particularly sample-based quantum diagonalization (SQD), a technique that uses a quantum computer to sample configurations from a chemically motivated quantum circuit and a classical computer to mitigate errors and solve the Schrödinger equation in a subspace of the configuration space. We apply the proposed method, LASSQD, to the [Fe(H2O)4]2bpym4+ compound and the [FeIIIFeIIIFeII3-O)-(HCOO)6] complex, assessing its accuracy and precision, respectively originating from approximations in the solution of the Schrödinger equation and stochasticity of configuration sampling. We observe that LASSQD can tackle fragment sizes intractable by LASSCF, achieves within 1kcal/mol agreement to LASSCF, and delivers results that are competitive with alternative classical methods to solve the Schrödinger equation, and thus can be used as a starting point for a perturbative treatment (LASSQD-PDFT) to recover

*This work has been supported by the IBM-University of Chicago Quantum Collaboration, under agreement number MAS000364, with access to the fleet of IBM Quantum computers.

Publication: Planned paper: Sample-based quantum diagonalization as parallel fragment solver for the localized active space self-consistent field method (in preparation)

Presenters

  • Qiaohong(Joanna) Wang

    • University of Chicago

Authors

  • Qiaohong(Joanna) Wang

    • University of Chicago
  • Mario Motta

    • IBM Thomas J. Watson Research Center
  • Ruhee D'Cunha

    • University of Chicago
  • Kevin J Sung

    • IBM Thomas J. Watson Research Center
  • Matthew R Hermes

    • University of Chicago
  • Tanvi P Gujarati

    • IBM Corporation
  • Yukio Kawashima

    • IBM Research - Tokyo
    • IBM Research-Tokyo
    • IBM Quantum, IBM Research -- Tokyo
  • Yu-ya Ohnishi

    • JSR Corporation
  • Gavin O Jones

    • IBM Quantum, T. J. Watson Research Center, Yorktown Heights, NY 10598, USA
    • IBM T.J. Watson Research Center
  • Laura Gagliardi

    • University of Chicago