Quantum-energy technology seminar
Evaluate quantum engines, driven boundaries, fluctuation harvesting, and vacuum proposals with complete cycles and energy ledgers.
Study passivity, quantum thermodynamics, non-equilibrium resources, measurement and feedback, squeezing, dynamical Casimir systems, rectification proposals, open-system modeling, and device claims through full-cycle accounting and reproducible benchmarks.
Before you begin
- • Quantum field theory and vacuum energy
- • Statistical mechanics
- • Casimir physics and experimental methods
By the end, you can
- • Distinguish equilibrium fluctuations from thermodynamic resources.
- • Model complete driven quantum cycles including preparation and reset.
- • Audit measurement, feedback, squeezing, and pump work.
- • Benchmark device claims against classical and quantum null models.
Interactive model
Explore before calculating

Live laboratory
Complete-cycle energy ledger
Move every input and the useful output. The laboratory keeps device-level quantum behavior separate from system-level energy performance.
Total input: 205 mJ
Net: -175 mJ
Efficiency: 14.6%
This declared boundary currently consumes more energy than it delivers as useful output.
Level 6 · Research preparation teaching kit
Record the investigation. Teach the reasoning.
A learner-facing lab record and a course-specific instructor guide turn the live model into a repeatable classroom investigation.
Learner record
Complete quantum-cycle work and reset ledger
Does a driven quantum protocol deliver positive net work after state preparation, measurement, feedback, control, and reset return every resource to its initial condition?
Download learner recordInstructor guide
Teach for evidence, not button pushing
Researchers evaluate quantum-energy proposals as complete driven cycles and benchmark them against classical and quantum null models.
Download instructor guideAdvanced assessment
Reconstruct it. Quantify it. Try to break it.
Close every preparation, control, feedback, extraction, and reset channel before evaluating a net-work claim. Three research-level challenges include explicit deliverables and scoring criteria.
Portable research dataset
Record data that another laboratory can open.
Stage-resolved energy, control, information, and state-closure records. JSON preserves schema and provenance; CSV supports ordinary analysis tools. Imports stay in this browser and are limited to 1 MB and 5,000 records.
Ready for a new research record.
| Cycle stagelabel | System ΔEJ | Work inJ | Work outJ | HeatJ | Control costJ | State returnedboolean | Record |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Schema field definitions
- Cycle stage · label
- Preparation, extraction, feedback, reset, or other stage.
- System ΔE · J
- Working-medium energy change.
- Work in · J
- External work supplied.
- Work out · J
- Useful work delivered.
- Heat · J
- Heat transferred into the system.
- Control cost · J
- Measurement, feedback, memory, and reset cost.
- State returned · boolean
- Whether all declared resources return to their initial states.
Lesson 1 of 3
Passivity, fluctuations, and quantum resources
When can a state deliver work under cyclic control?
A passive state cannot yield net work under a cyclic unitary process; thermal Gibbs states are completely passive. Fluctuations alone do not imply extractable work.
Nonthermal populations, coherence, squeezing, correlations, measurement records, and multiple reservoirs can be resources, but their preparation and reset costs belong in the cycle.
Worked example
Can a single equilibrium bath power a cyclic engine with no other change?
- 1. Return working body and controls to initial states.
- 2. Apply Kelvin–Planck statement.
- 3. Include measurement memory and switching.
- 4. Check for a hidden second reservoir.
No net work is available from one equilibrium bath in a complete cycle.
Try it
Hidden-resource audit
Materials: Three quantum-engine schematics
- 1. Mark all initial nonequilibrium states.
- 2. Trace pumps, measurements, and resets.
- 3. Identify reservoir changes.
- 4. Compute the complete cycle boundary.
Notice: A device can look autonomous when preparation or reset is kept outside the diagram.
Check your understanding: Is zero-point variance itself ergotropy?
Answer: No.
The ground state is passive under ordinary cyclic unitary control.
Lesson 2 of 3
Driven boundaries, open systems, and feedback
Which energy and entropy flows sustain an observed quantum output?
Time-dependent Hamiltonians and boundary parameters permit parametric conversion. Master equations describe exchange with reservoirs under stated Markov, weak-coupling, or rotating-wave assumptions.
Measurement and feedback can extract work from information, while memory reset and detector power close the ledger. Non-Markovian or strong-coupling systems require broader accounting of interaction energy.
Worked example
A squeezed output appears only when a pump is on. What is the first energy source to quantify?
- 1. Measure delivered pump power at the device.
- 2. Track conversion efficiency and loss.
- 3. Calibrate emitted modes.
- 4. Include control and refrigeration.
The pump is the explicit work source; squeezing characterizes the quantum conversion.
Try it
Open-system ledger
Materials: Synthetic drive, bath, detector, and output time series
- 1. Estimate work and heat currents.
- 2. Include interaction and switching terms.
- 3. Track information flows if feedback is used.
- 4. Close energy and entropy balances.
Notice: A missing interaction or reset term can reverse a claimed efficiency.
Check your understanding: Does non-equilibrium output violate the second law?
Answer: Not when all work, reservoirs, information, and reset costs are included.
The second law constrains the complete process.
Lesson 3 of 3
Device benchmarks, metrology, and scale-up
What benchmark would distinguish a new quantum resource from improved conversion or omitted input?
A credible benchmark specifies input impedance, delivered pump work, temperatures, bandwidth, load, loss, uncertainty, and repeatable output. Classical nonlinear and rectification models are mandatory nulls.
Scale-up must include decoherence, fabrication variation, refrigeration, control electronics, duty cycle, lifetime, and useful load. Microscopic quantum signatures and commercial energy performance are different milestones.
Worked example
A chip emits 1 nW while its cryostat and pump consume 1 kW. What claim is supported?
- 1. State calibrated chip output.
- 2. State local pump and facility inputs.
- 3. Calculate system ratio.
- 4. Separate quantum-state verification from energy performance.
It may demonstrate quantum conversion, not net-energy production; facility output/input is 10⁻¹².
Try it
Round-robin device benchmark
Materials: Common device, protocol, and blind calibration artifacts
- 1. Freeze test protocol.
- 2. Exchange devices or standards across labs.
- 3. Analyze blinded outputs.
- 4. Publish all results and energy ledgers.
Notice: Cross-lab benchmarking separates device physics from local calibration and analysis choices.
Check your understanding: What evidence is required for a net-energy claim?
Answer: Calibrated useful output exceeding every input and loss within a repeatable declared boundary and uncertainty.
Quantum signatures alone do not establish system gain.
Formula-to-meaning deck
Read the equation in ordinary language.
W_max=Tr(ρH)−min_UTr(UρU†H)
Ergotropy is the maximum unitary work extractable from a state relative to its passive rearrangement.
ΔE=W+Q
Open-system energy change separates work from controlled Hamiltonian changes and heat from environmental exchange.
η_system=E_useful,out/(E_pump+E_control+E_thermal+E_reset)
A system efficiency includes preparation, control, thermal, and reset inputs.
Independent practice
Problem set
Work each problem before opening its hint and solution.
1. A cycle extracts 5 μJ but state preparation costs 8 μJ. What is net work before other costs?
Reveal hint
Subtract preparation from extraction.
Reveal solution
−3 μJ.
2. Why is a thermal Gibbs state called completely passive?
Reveal hint
Consider any number of copies.
Reveal solution
No cyclic unitary can extract net work from one copy or any number of copies.
3. A device reports η=120% but excludes refrigeration. What is missing?
Reveal hint
Use the system boundary formula.
Reveal solution
The efficiency is not a complete system claim until refrigeration and all other external inputs are included.
Derivation studio
Build the result, line by line.
Keep the assumptions visible so the mathematics remains auditable.
Starting point
Passive-state work bound
Work from a cyclic unitary is initial energy minus final energy
- 1. Diagonalize ρ and H.
- 2. Rearrange populations to minimize final energy.
- 3. Pair largest populations with lowest energies.
- 4. Subtract the passive energy from the initial energy.
W≤W_max=Tr(ρH)−Tr(π_ρH)
Nonpassive population ordering or coherence can store work, while a ground or thermal state cannot power a cycle alone.
Starting point
Feedback work-information bound
Measurement creates mutual information I between system and memory
- 1. Apply feedback conditioned on outcomes.
- 2. Bound extractable work improvement by information.
- 3. Include memory reset with Landauer cost.
- 4. Combine the full cycle.
W_ext≤−ΔF+k_BT I, with reset restoring the ordinary second-law bound
Information can be a resource only when acquisition and reset are included.
Computational notebook
Turn the model into an experiment.
Complete quantum-cycle simulator
Does a proposed quantum-energy device outperform passive, classical, and driven null models after complete-cycle accounting?
Inputs
- • Hamiltonian and control schedule
- • Bath and loss model
- • Measurement/feedback protocol
- • Pump, reset, and facility inputs
Algorithm
- 1. Simulate state and energy flows.
- 2. Compute ergotropy and useful load work.
- 3. Add preparation, feedback, and reset costs.
- 4. Benchmark against classical and passive controls.
Evidence to produce
- • State and flow trajectories
- • Complete energy/entropy ledger
- • Null-model comparison and scale-up report
Paper-reading studio
Interrogate the source, not its reputation.
Reconstruct the assumptions, reproduce one calculation, and stop at the boundary of the reported evidence.
Quantum-energy device dossier
Which non-equilibrium resource powers the output, and where is its preparation and reset cost counted?
- 1. Reconstruct the cycle and system boundary.
- 2. Identify passive and classical nulls.
- 3. Reproduce calibrated output and uncertainty.
- 4. Add facility, control, and reset costs.
Calculation to reproduce: Reproduce one ergotropy, work-flow, photon-output, or full-cycle efficiency result.
Evidence boundary: Quantum conversion and fluctuation phenomena are established; a vacuum-powered net-energy device requires repeatable useful output beyond every preparation and operating input.
Graduate oral defense
Defend a bounded claim under pressure.
Argue the strongest support, state the strongest objection fairly, and identify evidence that could actually decide the issue.
Proposition
Quantum-energy research can yield new devices without violating thermodynamics or claiming free energy.
- 1. Coherence, squeezing, correlations, and feedback are controllable resources.
- 2. Quantum systems can improve sensing, transduction, and power density in specific regimes.
- 3. Complete resource theories make claims quantitatively testable.
Strongest objection: Microscopic demonstrations often omit facility costs and fail to scale beyond classical alternatives.
Deciding evidence: Independent device benchmarks showing reproducible task-level advantage and a complete system ledger under identical operating constraints.
Research practicum
Make the work inspectable before making it impressive.
Pre-register the decisive test, package every dependency, and pass explicit milestone gates before interpretation expands.
Preregister a quantum-device benchmark
Does one device beat the best classical/passive comparator on a declared task and full system boundary?
Preregister
- • Freeze task, load, and success metric.
- • Define pump/control/reset/facility boundary.
- • Specify null devices and uncertainty model.
Reproducibility package
- • Device and calibration manifest
- • Raw time streams and analysis code
- • Complete energy/entropy ledger
- • Round-robin lab protocol
Milestone gates
- 1. State/resource verification
- 2. Classical-null discrimination
- 3. Independent energy closure
- 4. Cross-lab task benchmark
Continue into the evidence