The use of the variational quantum
eigensolver (VQE) for quantum
chemistry is one of the most promising applications for noisy intermediate-scale
quantum (NISQ) devices. A major limitation is represented by the need
to build compact and shallow circuit ansatzes having the variational
flexibility to catch the complexity of the electronic structure problem.
To alleviate this drawback, we introduce a modified VQE scheme in
which the form of the molecular Hamiltonian is adapted to the circuit
ansatz through an optimization procedure. Exploiting the invariance
of the Hamiltonian by molecular orbital rotations, we can optimize
it using gradients that can be calculated without significant computational
overload. The proposed method, named Wavefunction Adapted Hamiltonian
Through Orbital Rotation (WAHTOR), has been applied to small molecules
in numerical state vector simulations. The results demonstrate that,
at variance with standard VQE, the method is less dependent on circuit
topology and less prone to be trapped into high-energy local minima.
It is able to recover a significant amount of electron correlation
even with only empirical ansatzes with shallow circuit depth. Noisy
calculations demonstrate the robustness and feasibility of the proposed
methodology and indicate the hardware requirements to effectively
apply the procedure using forthcoming NISQ devices.
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