Multiple-pulse phase-matching quantum key distribution

2020 ◽  
Vol 19 (11) ◽  
Author(s):  
Gang Chen ◽  
Le Wang ◽  
Wei Li ◽  
Yang Zhao ◽  
Shengmei Zhao ◽  
...  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wen-Ting Li ◽  
Le Wang ◽  
Wei Li ◽  
Sheng-Mei Zhao

Abstract The transmission loss of photons during quantum key distribution(QKD) process leads to the linear key rate bound for practical QKD systems without quantum repeaters. Phase matching quantum key distribution (PM-QKD) protocol, an novel QKD protocol, can overcome the constraint with a measurement-device-independent structure, while it still requires the light source to be ideal. This assumption is not guaranteed in practice, leading to practical secure issues. In this paper, we propose a modified PM-QKD protocol with a light source monitoring, named PM-QKD-LSM protocol, which can guarantee the security of the system under the non-ideal source condition. The results show that our proposed protocol performs almost the same as the ideal PM-QKD protocol even considering the imperfect factors in practical systems. PM-QKD-LSM protocol has a better performance with source fluctuation, and it is robust in symmetric or asymmetric cases.


2018 ◽  
Vol 8 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Xiongfeng Ma ◽  
Pei Zeng ◽  
Hongyi Zhou

Laser Physics ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 30 (5) ◽  
pp. 055202
Author(s):  
Gao Feifei ◽  
Li Zhihui ◽  
Liu Chengji ◽  
Han Duo

2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Wei Li ◽  
Le Wang ◽  
Shengmei Zhao

Abstract Two time-reversal quantum key distribution (QKD) schemes are the quantum entanglement based device-independent (DI)-QKD and measurement-device-independent (MDI)-QKD. The recently proposed twin field (TF)-QKD, also known as phase-matching (PM)-QKD, has improved the key rate bound from O(η) to O$$(\sqrt{{\boldsymbol{\eta }}})$$ ( η ) with η the channel transmittance. In fact, TF-QKD is a kind of MDI-QKD but based on single-photon detection. In this paper, we propose a different PM-QKD based on single-photon entanglement, referred to as single-photon entanglement-based phase-matching (SEPM)-QKD, which can be viewed as a time-reversed version of the TF-QKD. Detection loopholes of the standard Bell test, which often occur in DI-QKD over long transmission distances, are not present in this protocol because the measurement settings and key information are the same quantity which is encoded in the local weak coherent state. We give a security proof of SEPM-QKD and demonstrate in theory that it is secure against all collective attacks and beam-splitting attacks. The simulation results show that the key rate enjoys a bound of O$$(\sqrt{{\boldsymbol{\eta }}})$$ ( η ) with respect to the transmittance. SEPM-QKD not only helps us understand TF-QKD more deeply, but also hints at a feasible approach to eliminate detection loopholes in DI-QKD for long-distance communications.


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