State-Averaged Quantum Algorithms for Multiconfigurational Surface Chemistry: A Benchmark on Rh@TiO2(110)
Abstract
Accurate modeling of surface catalytic processes often requires methods capable of describing strong correlation, charge transfer, and multiple closely lying electronic states. While density functional theory remains widely used, its limitations for localized electronic states motivate the use of wavefunction-based approaches and, more recently, quantum computing algorithms. However, the performance of quantum ansätze in chemically motivated, multistate settings remains largely unexplored. Her...
Description / Details
Accurate modeling of surface catalytic processes often requires methods capable of describing strong correlation, charge transfer, and multiple closely lying electronic states. While density functional theory remains widely used, its limitations for localized electronic states motivate the use of wavefunction-based approaches and, more recently, quantum computing algorithms. However, the performance of quantum ansätze in chemically motivated, multistate settings remains largely unexplored. Here, we benchmark state-averaged factorized unitary coupled cluster with singles and doubles (SA-fUCCSD) and the adaptive, problem-tailored ansatz (SA-ADAPT) using an embedded cluster model of NO adsorption on Rh-doped TiO2(110). The system exhibits pronounced multiconfigurational character and multiple state crossings, providing a stringent test. State-averaged CASSCF serves as a reference, and the quantum ansätze are evaluated as solvers for the corresponding CASCI problem within a fixed orbital basis. We find that SA-fUCCSD improves with increasing circuit depth but requires many parameters and shows sensitivity to initialization. In contrast, SA-ADAPT achieves near-CASSCF accuracy with significantly fewer operators. A modified operator selection scheme, incorporating multiple operators per iteration, substantially accelerates convergence. Our results demonstrate the efficiency of adaptive ansätze for multistate problems and establish a controlled benchmark for quantum algorithms in chemically motivated systems beyond minimal models.
Source: arXiv:2604.17925v1 - http://arxiv.org/abs/2604.17925v1 PDF: https://arxiv.org/pdf/2604.17925v1 Original Link: http://arxiv.org/abs/2604.17925v1
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Apr 21, 2026
Chemistry
Chemistry
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