Abstract Variational quantum algorithms offer a practical route to low-energy state preparation on near-term hardware, but performance depends strongly on ansatz design. We introduce the Heat-Exchange (HE) ansatz, a compact circuit family inspired by heat-bath algorithmic cooling and built from a tunable exchange interaction between a system qubit and an auxiliary bath qubit. On superconducting processors the exchange evolution U₇₄ () = -i (XX+YY) /2 U HE (θ) = exp - i θ (X X + Y Y) / 2 is implemented digitally as a shallow compiled gate sequence, requiring no mid-circuit reset, measurement, or feedback. We benchmark HE on two complementary tasks: weighted MaxCut on random complete graphs (noise-free simulation and hardware runs on with readout error mitigation) and a one-dimensional Heisenberg chain with a pinned site within a dissipative-VQE-style workflow (noise-free simulation). HE increases the probability of sampling the best cut compared with a hardware-efficient baseline and QAOA under limited evaluation budgets and yields ground-state energies with sub-percent relative error for the impurity chain. These results highlight exchange-driven cooling blocks as compact, parameter-efficient, hardware-compatible primitives for near-term variational workflows.
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Shin et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69ccb6fd16edfba7beb88c2b — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s40042-026-01627-3
Soyoung Shin
Ha Eum Kim
Jaewan Kim
Journal of the Korean Physical Society
University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
Seoul National University
Kyung Hee University
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