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Optimal Work Extraction and the Minimum Description Length Principle

We discuss work extraction from classical information engines (e.g., Szilárd) with $N$-particles, $q$ partitions, and initial arbitrary non-equilibrium states. In particular, we focus on their {\em optimal} behaviour, which includes the measurement of a set of quantities $Φ$ with a feedback protocol that extracts the maximal average amount of work. We show that the optimal non-equilibrium state to which the engine should be driven before the measurement is given by the normalised maximum-likelihood probability distribution of a statistical model that admits $Φ$ as sufficient statistics. Furthermore, we show that the minimax universal code redundancy $\mathcal{R}^*$ associated to this model, provides an upper bound to the work that the demon can extract on average from the cycle, in units of $k_{\rm B}T$. We also find that, in the limit of $N$ large, the maximum average extracted work cannot exceed $H[Φ]/2$, i.e. one half times the Shannon entropy of the measurement. Our results establish a connection between optimal work extraction in stochastic thermodynamics and optimal universal data compression, providing design principles for optimal information engines. In particular, they suggest that: (i) optimal coding is thermodynamically efficient, and (ii) it is essential to drive the system into a critical state in order to achieve optimal performance.

preprint2020arXivOpen access
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