Experimentally optimizing QKD rates via nonlocal dispersion compensation
Sebastian Philipp Neumann, Domenico Ribezzo, Martin Bohmann, Rupert, Ursin

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates a novel quantum key distribution method using nonlocal dispersion compensation to significantly increase key rates over fiber optic links by exploiting quantum entanglement properties.
Contribution
It introduces the first experimental use of nonlocal dispersion compensation in QKD, enhancing key rates and enabling longer-distance secure communication.
Findings
Key rate increased from 6.1 to 228.3 bits/s over 6.46 km fiber
Nonlocal dispersion compensation improves temporal correlations of entangled photons
Method is extendable to longer fibers and higher dispersion values
Abstract
Quantum key distribution (QKD) enables unconditionally secure communication guaranteed by the laws of physics. The last decades have seen tremendous efforts in making this technology feasible under real-life conditions, with implementations bridging ever longer distances and creating ever higher secure key rates. Readily deployed glass fiber connections are a natural choice for distributing the single photons necessary for QKD both in intra- and intercity links. Any fiber-based implementation however experiences chromatic dispersion which deteriorates temporal detection precision. This ultimately limits maximum distance and achievable key rate of such QKD systems. In this work, we address this limitation to both maximum distance and key rate and present an effective and easy-to-implement method to overcome chromatic dispersion effects. By exploiting the entangled photons' frequency…
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