| Literature DB >> 31573314 |
Yang Liu1,2,3, Zong-Wen Yu4,5, Weijun Zhang6, Jian-Yu Guan1,2, Jiu-Peng Chen1,2, Chi Zhang1,2, Xiao-Long Hu4, Hao Li6, Cong Jiang4, Jin Lin1,2, Teng-Yun Chen1,2, Lixing You6, Zhen Wang6, Xiang-Bin Wang2,3,4, Qiang Zhang1,2, Jian-Wei Pan1,2.
Abstract
Channel loss seems to be the most severe limitation on the practical application of long distance quantum key distribution. The idea of twin-field quantum key distribution can improve the key rate from the linear scale of channel loss in the traditional decoy-state method to the square root scale of the channel transmittance. However, the technical demands are rather tough because they require single photon level interference of two remote independent lasers. Here, we adopt the technology developed in the frequency and time transfer to lock two independent laser wavelengths and utilize additional phase reference light to estimate and compensate the fiber fluctuation. Further, with a single photon detector with a high detection rate, we demonstrate twin field quantum key distribution through the sending-or-not-sending protocol with a realistic phase drift over 300 km optical fiber spools. We calculate the secure key rates with the finite size effect. The secure key rate at 300 km (1.96×10^{-6}) is higher than that of the repeaterless secret key capacity (8.64×10^{-7}).Year: 2019 PMID: 31573314 DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.123.100505
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Phys Rev Lett ISSN: 0031-9007 Impact factor: 9.161