A case study of variational quantum algorithms for a job shop scheduling problem

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Abstract

Combinatorial optimization models a vast range of industrial processes aiming at improving their efficiency. In general, solving this type of problem exactly is computationally intractable. Therefore, practitioners rely on heuristic solution approaches. Variational quantum algorithms are optimization heuristics that can be demonstrated with available quantum hardware. In this case study, we apply four variational quantum heuristics running on IBM’s superconducting quantum processors to the job shop scheduling problem. Our problem optimizes a steel manufacturing process. A comparison on 5 qubits shows that the recent filtering variational quantum eigensolver (F-VQE) converges faster and samples the global optimum more frequently than the quantum approximate optimization algorithm (QAOA), the standard variational quantum eigensolver (VQE), and variational quantum imaginary time evolution (VarQITE). Furthermore, F-VQE readily solves problem sizes of up to 23 qubits on hardware without error mitigation post processing.

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Amaro, D., Rosenkranz, M., Fitzpatrick, N., Hirano, K., & Fiorentini, M. (2022). A case study of variational quantum algorithms for a job shop scheduling problem. EPJ Quantum Technology, 9(1). https://doi.org/10.1140/epjqt/s40507-022-00123-4

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