Author
Listed:
- Grazi, Riccardo
- Cavaliere, Fabio
- Sassetti, Maura
- Ferraro, Dario
- Traverso Ziani, Niccolò
Abstract
The performances of many-body quantum batteries strongly depend on the Hamiltonian of the battery, the initial state, and the charging protocol. In this article we derive an analytical expression for the energy stored via a double sudden quantum quench in a large class of quantum systems whose Hamiltonians can be reduced to 2x2 free fermion problems, whose initial state is thermal. Our results apply to conventional two-band electronic systems across all dimensions and quantum spin chains that can be solved through the Jordan–Wigner transformation. In particular, we apply our analytical relation to the quantum Ising chain, to the quantum XY chain, to the cluster Ising and to the long range SSH models. We obtain several results: (i) The strong dependence of the stored energy on the quantum phase diagram of the charging Hamiltonian persists even when the charging starts from a thermal state. Interestingly, in the thermodynamic limit, such a strong dependence manifests itself as non-analyticities of the stored energy corresponding to the quantum phase transition points of the charging Hamiltonian. (ii) The dependence of the stored energy on the parameters of the Hamiltonian can, in the Ising chain case, be drastically reduced by increasing temperature; (iii) Charging the Ising or the XY chain prepared in the ground state of their classical points leads to an amount of stored energy that, within a large parameter range, does not depend on the charging parameters; (iv) The cluster Ising model and the long range SSH model, despite showing quantum phase transitions (QPTs) between states with orders dominated by different interaction ranges, do not exhibit super-extensive, i.e. more than linear in the number of sites, scaling of the charging power.
Suggested Citation
Grazi, Riccardo & Cavaliere, Fabio & Sassetti, Maura & Ferraro, Dario & Traverso Ziani, Niccolò, 2025.
"Charging free fermion quantum batteries,"
Chaos, Solitons & Fractals, Elsevier, vol. 196(C).
Handle:
RePEc:eee:chsofr:v:196:y:2025:i:c:s0960077925003960
DOI: 10.1016/j.chaos.2025.116383
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