Enhanced Reinforcement Learning-based Process Synthesis via Quantum Computing

arXiv:2605.2121332.1
Predicted impact top 50% in QUANT-PH · last 90 daysOriginality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

For process systems engineers, this work provides a foundation for quantum computing applications in process synthesis, though the gains are incremental and limited to moderate-scale problems.

This work introduces quantum reinforcement learning algorithms for process synthesis, overcoming qubit scaling limitations with state encoding. The quantum approaches achieve competitive performance on a per-episode basis and improved efficiency per parameter compared to classical RL for moderate-scale unit counts.

In this work, we present quantum reinforcement learning (RL) as a solution strategy for process synthesis problems. Building on our prior work, we develop a generalized framework that formally poses process synthesis as a Markov decision process and introduces quantum-enhanced RL algorithms to solve it with improved scalability. Earlier implementations of quantum-based RL for process synthesis were limited by qubit requirements, which scaled poorly with problem complexity. This work overcomes this challenge by introducing state encoding algorithms to decouple qubit requirements from problem size. A classical RL-based solution strategy is used as a baseline to benchmark the quantum algorithms under identical training conditions. All algorithms are evaluated across a flowsheet synthesis problem of increasing unit counts to analyze their performance and scalability. Results show that all approaches are capable of identifying the optimal flowsheet designs in small design spaces. For moderate-scale unit counts, quantum approaches demonstrate competitive performance on a per-episode basis and improved efficiency on a per-parameter basis versus the classical RL benchmark. This work provides a foundation for future quantum computing applications within process systems engineering, establishes a controlled benchmark for comparing classical and quantum algorithms, and shows that the proposed quantum variants remain competitive for the process synthesis problem examined in this work.

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