posted on 2022-01-21, 16:06authored byKeita Omiya, Yuya O. Nakagawa, Sho Koh, Wataru Mizukami, Qi Gao, Takao Kobayashi
Elucidating
photochemical reactions is vital to understanding various
biochemical phenomena and developing functional materials such as
artificial photosynthesis and organic solar cells, albeit with notorious
difficulty in both experiments and theories. The best theoretical
way so far to analyze photochemical reactions at the level of ab initio
electronic structure is the state-averaged multiconfigurational self-consistent
field (SA-MCSCF) method. However, the exponential computational cost
of classical computers with the increasing number of molecular orbitals
hinders applications of SA-MCSCF for large systems we are interested
in. Utilizing quantum computers was recently proposed as a promising
approach to overcome such computational cost, dubbed as state-averaged
orbital-optimized variational quantum eigensolver (SA-OO-VQE). Here,
we extend a theory of SA-OO-VQE so that analytical gradients of energy
can be evaluated by standard techniques that are feasible with near-term
quantum computers. The analytical gradients, known only for the state-specific
OO-VQE in previous studies, allow us to determine various characteristics
of photochemical reactions such as the conical intersection (CI) points.
We perform a proof-of-principle calculation of our methods by applying
it to the photochemical cis–trans isomerization
of 1,3,3,3-tetrafluoropropene. Numerical simulations of quantum circuits
and measurements can correctly capture the photochemical reaction
pathway of this model system, including the CI points. Our results
illustrate the possibility of leveraging quantum computers for studying
photochemical reactions.