10. Quantum Chemistry: Christian Gogolin and Gian-Luca Anselmetti

Show notes

We continue our new season by featuring members of the cluster who are working at the intersection with other stakeholders in the larger quantum community. In this episode, we talk to Christian Gogolin and Gian Anselmetti who are in-house scientists at Covestro and associated to ML4Q. We discuss solving chemistry problems with quantum computers, research in a company setting and the PhD student-supervisor-relationship.

00:00:00 Intro

00:00:45 What does Covestro do and what sort of projects is undertaken in its digital R&D department?

00:02:44 How did the partnership with the University of Cologne and ML4Q come about?

00:04:45 How much effort and resources are invested at Covestro in digital R&D and what are the company’s goals and expectations from its research program?

00:10:38 @Gian: How different is it to do a PhD in industry in comparison to doing it in a university institute?

00:14:00 @Christian: How different is your career now in industry than in the academic setting?

00:18:15 Talking about Gian’s background: switching from experimental physics during the master’s project to a theory PhD project

00:23:20 What made Gian stand out among other applicants for the PhD project?

00:24:55 On setting up the codebase

00:32:36 Talking about Christian’s background: working as a PhD student with Jens Eisert in Berlin and as a postdoc at ICFO and Xanadu Quantum Computing

00:40:30 a or b? (questions were sent to Gian and Christian beforehand)

  1. Are you more annoyed by people claiming that a quantum computer a) solves chemistry or b) solves problems by just trying out all possible answers?
  2. Is Christian as PhD supervisor a) too close or b) too distant?
  3. Should Gian spend more time on a) his code or b) reading literature?
  4. Should Gian spend more time a) listening to his supervisor or b) following his own ideas?
  5. Are your codes a) more performant or b) more understandable?
  6. What year do you think the first commercially viable quantum computer will be available?

00:49:05 Talking about computational chemistry – in general and classically

01:00:35 Talking about quantum computational chemistry with variational algorithms

01:08:35 Between simulating the quantum computing setting on classical hardware and running algorithms on-chip using available quantum computers

01:11:00 Standing of the quantum computing department within the long established computational chemistry department

New comment

Your name or nickname, will be shown publicly
At least 10 characters long
By submitting your comment you agree that the content of the field "Name or nickname" will be stored and shown publicly next to your comment. Using your real name is optional.