Studies on the readability and on the detection rate in a Mach-Zehnder interferometer-based implementation for high-rate, long-distance QKD protocols
Christos Papapanos, Dimitris Zavitsanos, Adam Raptakis, Giannis, Giannoulis, Christos Kouloumentas, Hercules Avramopoulos

TL;DR
This paper analyzes how chromatic dispersion impacts the visibility and synchronization in fiber-based Mach-Zehnder interferometer setups for high-rate, long-distance QKD, proposing methods for dispersion compensation to improve performance.
Contribution
It introduces new dispersion compensation techniques tailored for high-rate, long-distance fiber-optic QKD systems, enhancing symbol discrimination and synchronization.
Findings
Identifies conditions for path length differences to maintain visibility.
Proposes two dispersion compensation methods based on clock rate.
Demonstrates applicability to phase-encoding BB84 protocol.
Abstract
We study the way that chromatic dispersion affects the visibility and the synchronization on Quantum Key Distribution (QKD) protocols in a widely-used setup based on the use of two fiber-based Mach-Zehnder (MZ) interferometers at transmitter/receiver stations. We identify the necessary conditions for the path length difference between the two arms of the interferometers for achieving the desired visibility given the transmission distance -- where the form of the detector's window can be considered. We also associate the above limitations with the maximum detection rate that can be recorded in our setup, including the quantum non-linearity phenomenon, and to the maximum time window of the detector's gate. Exploiting our results we provide two methods, depending on the clock rate of the setup, to perform chromatic dispersion compensation techniques to the signal for keeping the correct…
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