Davies-Morris-Shore Framework for Multilevel Quantum Batteries: Dark and Funnel States in Interacting Qutrit Systems
Yiğit Perçin, Özgür E. Müstecaplıoğlu
TLDR
This paper introduces a Davies-Morris-Shore framework to identify long-lived energy storage states, including dark and funnel states, in multilevel quantum batteries.
Key contributions
- Introduces a Davies-Morris-Shore framework for identifying long-lived energy storage in multilevel quantum batteries.
- Analytically constructs dark, bright, and funnel states in a two-qutrit system, showing storage beyond qubits.
- Derives robustness conditions for these states based on interaction strength and anharmonicity.
- Identifies high-energy funnel states as ideal design targets for protected multilevel quantum batteries.
Why it matters
This framework provides a systematic way to design robust, long-lived quantum batteries by leveraging multilevel systems. It offers a principled basis for developing advanced protection and control strategies in future superconducting platforms, overcoming limitations of qubit-only approaches.
Original Abstract
Dark and subradiant states have emerged as a promising resource for stabilizing open quantum batteries against dissipation, but existing studies are largely limited to qubit ensembles and symmetry-based constructions. Here we introduce a systematic, thermodynamically consistent framework for identifying long-lived energy storage states in interacting multilevel quantum batteries, combining the Davies master equation with a Morris-Shore (MS)-type decomposition of dissipative coupling blocks. Focusing on a minimal model of two interacting qutrits coupled to a common bath, we analytically construct dark, bright, and funnel states-excited states that decay exclusively into protected manifolds. We also derive quantitative robustness conditions governed by the ratio of interaction strength to anharmonicity. We show that multilevel ladder structure and exchange interactions enable energetic storage states beyond the qubit case. Numerical simulations confirm that these states exhibit long-lived energy storage under realistic dissipation. Finally, we show that high-energy funnel states provide a natural design target for multilevel quantum batteries, as their decay pathways are highly structured and directed toward protected manifolds. Knowledge of these pathways offers a principled basis for developing future protection and control strategies in superconducting multilevel platforms.
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