Energy

Quantum batteries could charge by breaking our understanding of time

Quantum batteries could charge by breaking our understanding of time
A diagram of the quantum battery charging through indefinite causal order (ICO)
A diagram of the quantum battery charging through indefinite causal order (ICO)
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Quantum batteries have been found to have an inverse interaction effect, where a weaker power source is better able to charge the battery, which improves their efficiency
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Quantum batteries have been found to have an inverse interaction effect, where a weaker power source is better able to charge the battery, which improves their efficiency
A diagram of the quantum battery charging through indefinite causal order (ICO)
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A diagram of the quantum battery charging through indefinite causal order (ICO)

Causality is key to our experience of reality: dropping a glass, for example, causes it to smash, so it can’t smash before it’s dropped. But in the quantum world those rules don’t necessarily apply, and scientists have now demonstrated how that weirdness can be harnessed to charge a quantum battery.

In a sense, you could say that quantum batteries are powered by paradoxes. On paper, they work by storing energy in the quantum states of atoms and molecules – but of course, as soon as the word “quantum” enters the conversation you know weird stuff is about to happen. In this case, a new study has found that quantum batteries could work by violating cause-and-effect as we know it.

“Current batteries for low-power devices, such as smartphones or sensors, typically use chemicals such as lithium to store charge, whereas a quantum battery uses microscopic particles like arrays of atoms,” said Yuanbo Chen, an author of the study. “While chemical batteries are governed by classical laws of physics, microscopic particles are quantum in nature, so we have a chance to explore ways of using them that bend or even break our intuitive notions of what takes place at small scales. I’m particularly interested in the way quantum particles can work to violate one of our most fundamental experiences, that of time.”

In classical physics – the kind we experience in the large-scale world – causality is clearly linear. To return to the earlier analogy, dropping a glass (Event A) causes it to smash (Event B), but you can’t reverse the relationship between those two events. The glass didn’t fall because it was smashed. But in the spooky realm of quantum physics, this limitation doesn’t have to apply. And baking that paradox into a quantum battery could help make them more efficient.

In the new study, scientists at the University of Tokyo conducted a lab experiment using lasers, lenses and mirrors that act as a large-scale quantum battery. Charging these batteries would usually require multiple charging stages that work one after another, but here the team took advantage of a quantum effect called indefinite causal order (ICO). Basically, once they bring the system into a quantum superposition, the causal order can exist in both directions at the same time, allowing the multiple charging steps to work together rather than sequentially.

Quantum batteries have been found to have an inverse interaction effect, where a weaker power source is better able to charge the battery, which improves their efficiency
Quantum batteries have been found to have an inverse interaction effect, where a weaker power source is better able to charge the battery, which improves their efficiency

“With ICO, we demonstrated that the way you charge a battery made up of quantum particles could drastically impact its performance,” said Chen. “We saw huge gains in both the energy stored in the system and the thermal efficiency. And somewhat counterintuitively, we discovered the surprising effect of an interaction that’s the inverse of what you might expect: A lower-power charger could provide higher energies with greater efficiency than a comparably higher-power charger using the same apparatus.”

It may be hard for most people to get their heads around, but quantum batteries could one day be a reality. Currently they only exist as lab experiments, but scientists are slowly testing different aspects of them with the eventual goal of figuring out how to pull the various pieces together into a working whole.

The research was published in the journal Physical Review Letters.

Source: University of Tokyo

10 comments
10 comments
Ric
Even if the world ends in my lifetime I’ll consider myself lucky to have lived at a time where knowledge has grown exponentially and revealed so many mysteries and breached so many limits.
NewThings
After reading this article I think that quantum is just another explanation for what we have thought of as magic.
solas
The "magic" here is not really described at all -- if you want that, looking up the Quantum bomb experiment, or (argued by Sabin Hassenfelder as NOT magic) the quantum eraser experiment. Superposition is mentioned as the key to success here, but they don't get into it at all, and it's really not magic. In fact, it's fairly pedestrian for modern science. Finally, but off topic, most of the quantum "magic" goes away -- but not the weirdness, it's most definitely weird -- if you understand 1) it's really time-space as a variable, not time 2) the laws of information flow (instead of thinking linear time) 3) the laws of the conservation of energy
Calvin
Well in the quantum world could you not have a battery made up of many minute quantum batteries where their states could be charged or flat. and that way you could constantly be setting its state to charged?
Rusty
December 17, 1903 was the 120th anniversary of the "first" flight. My Grandfather was a small boy of around 5 years old.
From his birth, until his death at the age of 98 year old, he witnessed (lived in a small town of 500 people), telephone, radio,
television, two world wars, nuclear weapons, cars, interstate highways, space flight, landing on the moon among other things.
Wonder how much will happen in the next 120 years (if we don't blow it up).
jimbo92107
This might be a good way to avoid the dendrite problem. If a charge carrier "tunnels" through a normally impenetrable electrolyte barrier, then these tiny short circuits should never happen.
Catweazle
"Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic."
Clarke's third law.
Eggbones
Excellent! I love seeing these kinds of potenially hugely significant developments.
MCG
“The day science begins to study non-physical phenomena, it will make more progress in one decade than in all the previous centuries of its existence.”

― Nikola Tesla
Baker Steve
Douglas Adams' Infinite Improbability Drive moves ever closer. My head is exploding: cover me with leaves and wake me up in spring.

My cat Woozle can do spontaneous quantum translocation: how else could he get both into and out of the back of a wall cupboard full of sauce bottles without disturbing any? (Photo available.)