Phase-Matching Quantum Key Distribution
Xiongfeng Ma, Pei Zeng, Hongyi Zhou

TL;DR
This paper introduces a phase-matching quantum key distribution scheme that overcomes the linear rate-distance limit, achieves higher key rates, and is practical with current technology due to phase postcompensation.
Contribution
It develops a novel optical-mode-based security proof for phase-matching QKD, enabling measurement device independence and practical implementation without phase locking.
Findings
Key rate scales with the square root of transmission probability, surpassing traditional bounds.
The scheme is measurement device independent, immune to detection attacks.
Practical implementation is feasible with current technology using phase postcompensation.
Abstract
Quantum key distribution allows remote parties to generate information-theoretic secure keys. The bottleneck throttling its real-life applications lies in the limited communication distance and key generation speed, due to the fact that the information carrier can be easily lost in the channel. For all the current implementations, the key rate is bounded by the channel transmission probability, . Rather surprisingly, by matching the phases of two coherent states and encoding the key information into the common phase, this linear key-rate constraint can be overcome---the secure key rate scales with the square root of the transmission probability, , as proposed in twin-field quantum key distribution [Nature (London) 557, 400 (2018)]. To achieve this, we develop an optical-mode-based security proof that is different from the conventional qubit-based security proofs.…
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