Abstract

Solving inverse problems to identify Hamiltonians with desired properties holds promise for the discovery of fundamental principles. In quantum systems, quantum entanglement plays a pivotal role in not only characterizing the quantum nature but also developing quantum technology such as quantum computing. Nonetheless, the design principles of the quantum entanglement are yet to be clarified. Here we apply an inverse design framework using automatic differentiation to quantum spin systems, aiming to construct Hamiltonians with large quantum entanglement. We show that the method automatically finds the Kitaev model with bond-dependent anisotropic interactions, whose ground state is a quantum spin liquid, on both honeycomb and square-octagon lattices. On triangular and maple-leaf lattices with geometrical frustration, it generates numerous solutions with spatially inhomogeneous interactions rather than converging to a specific model, but it still helps to construct unprecedented models. The comparative study reveals that bond-dependent anisotropic interactions, rather than isotropic Heisenberg interactions, amplify quantum entanglement, even in the systems with geometrical frustration. The present study paves the way for the automatic design of new quantum systems with desired quantum nature and functionality. Published by the American Physical Society 2024

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