IBM Quantum Computer Accurately Simulates Real Magnetic Materials, Reproducing National Laboratory Data
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Team from
U.S. Department of Energy-funded Quantum Science Center demonstrates quantum computers can perform material simulation that many previously believed to be beyond current quantum capabilities. - High simulation accuracy is enabled by quantum-centric supercomputing workflows and reductions in hardware error rates.
- Results point toward quantum-centric supercomputing as a new scientific instrument for materials discovery, with long-term implications for superconductors, medical imaging, energy, and drug development.
The ability to design new materials—such as better superconductors, more efficient batteries, or novel drugs—depends on understanding quantum behavior that is often challenging for classical methods to model. While quantum computers are expected to address this challenge, it has remained unclear whether today's processors could deliver quantitatively reliable simulations of real materials. These results show that current quantum hardware, combined with new algorithms and quantum-centric supercomputing workflows, can already simulate properties of materials, which in general, can be difficult to predict using classical methods alone.
"There is so much neutron scattering data on magnetic materials that we don't fully understand because of the limitations of approximate classical methods," said
The Experiment
Scientists have long used neutron sources to reveal the quantum properties of materials by measuring how incident neutrons exchange energy and momentum with spins in the material. In this study, the team focused on the well-characterized magnetic crystal KCuF3 and directly compared neutron scattering measurements with simulations on a quantum computer. The agreement between experiment and simulation demonstrates that quantum processors can now capture key dynamical properties of real materials. "This is the most impressive match I've seen between experimental data and qubit simulation, and it definitely raises the bar for what can be expected from quantum computers," said
These results begin to establish quantum computers as reliable computational tools for material simulation. "Quantum simulations of realistic models for materials and their experimental characterization is a major demonstration of the impact quantum computing can have on scientific discovery workflows," said
The study also highlights how improvements in the scale and quality of quantum processors were crucial for the simulation accuracy achieved. "These results were really enabled by the two-qubit error rates that we can now access on our quantum processors," said
Building Toward the Quantum Era
This experiment is part of a broader shift in how quantum computers are being applied toward scientific problems defined by laboratories. Recent results include the first quantum simulation of a never-before-seen in nature half-Möbius molecule and a large-scale protein simulation with
The quantum-centric supercomputing approach demonstrated here is designed to deliver scientific and commercial value by combining today's quantum hardware with classical computing in workflows that make productive use of both.
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