Harnessing non-equilibrium forces to optimize work extraction
Harnessing non-equilibrium forces to optimize work extraction
While optimal control theory offers effective strategies for minimizing energetic costs in noisy microscopic systems over finite durations, a significant opportunity lies in exploiting the temporal structure of non-equilibrium forces. We demonstrate this by presenting exact analytical forms for the optimal protocol and the corresponding work for any driving force and protocol duration. We also derive a general quasistatic bound on the work, relying only on the coarse-grained, time-integrated characteristics of the applied forces. Notably, we show that the optimal protocols often automatically act as information engines that harness information about non-equilibrium forces and an initial state measurement to extract work. These findings chart new directions for designing adaptive, energy-efficient strategies in noisy, time-dependent environments, as illustrated through our examples of periodic driving forces and active matter systems. By exploiting the temporal structure of non-equilibrium forces, this largely unexplored approach holds promise for substantial performance gains in microscopic devices operating at the nano- and microscale.
Kristian St?levik Olsen、Rémi Goerlich、Yael Roichman、Hartmut L?wen
热工量测、热工自动控制工程基础科学
Kristian St?levik Olsen,Rémi Goerlich,Yael Roichman,Hartmut L?wen.Harnessing non-equilibrium forces to optimize work extraction[EB/OL].(2025-04-09)[2025-06-06].https://arxiv.org/abs/2504.07049.点此复制
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