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Thermal machines exploit interactions with multiple heat baths to perform useful tasks, such as work production and refrigeration. In the quantum regime, tasks with no classical counterpart become possible. Here, we explore the fundamental resources needed to generate operationally useful entanglement. We focus on the minimal setting for quantum thermal machines, namely two-qubit autonomous thermal machines that use only incoherent interactions with their environment. Considering the paradigmatic tasks of Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen steering, quantum teleportation and Bell nonlocality, we investigate the trade-off between operational nonclassicality and the resources made available to the machine. For the resources, we consider bosonic and fermionic baths, with and without populations inversion, and with and without local filtering. We provide both constructive examples and no-go results demonstrating when each of the three tasks are possible or impossible. Our results identify fundamental limitations to autonomous entanglement generation and open up a path toward producing increasingly powerful quantum correlations from thermal resources.
The characterization and control of quantum effects in the performance of thermodynamic tasks may open new avenues for small thermal machines working in the nanoscale. We study the impact of coherence in the energy basis in the operation of a small t
One of the principal objectives of quantum thermodynamics is to explore quantum effects and their potential beneficial role in thermodynamic tasks like work extraction or refrigeration. So far, even though several papers have already shown that quant
It is demonstrated that thermal radiation of small occupation number is strongly nonclassical. This includes most forms of naturally occurring radiation. Nonclassicality can be observed as a negative weak value of a positive observable. It is related
For a bipartite local quantum correlation, superlocality refers to the requirement for a larger dimension of the random variable in the classical simulation protocol than that of the quantum states that generate the correlations. In this work, we con
Recent years have enjoyed an overwhelming interest in quantum thermodynamics, a field of research aimed at understanding thermodynamic tasks performed in the quantum regime. Further progress, however, seems to be obstructed by the lack of experimenta