Quantum cryptography with highly entangled photons from semiconductor quantum dots
Christian Schimpf, Marcus Reindl, Daniel Huber, Barbara Lehner, Saimon, F. Covre Da Silva, Santanu Manna, Michal Vyvlecka, Philip Walther, Armando, Rastelli

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates the use of semiconductor quantum dots to generate highly entangled photon pairs for quantum key distribution, achieving high fidelity and practical key rates over fiber links, advancing quantum communication technology.
Contribution
First implementation of the BBM92 protocol using a quantum dot source with high entanglement fidelity, showing practical key distribution over 350 meters without filtering.
Findings
Achieved entanglement fidelity of 0.97(1).
Generated keys at 135 bits/sec over 350 meters.
Demonstrated viability of quantum dots for quantum networks.
Abstract
State-of-the-art quantum key distribution systems are based on the BB84 protocol and single photons generated by lasers. These implementations suffer from range limitations and security loopholes, which require expensive adaptation. The use of polarization entangled photon pairs substantially alleviates the security threads while allowing for basically arbitrary transmission distances when embedded in quantum repeater schemes. Semiconductor quantum dots are capable of emitting highly entangled photon pairs with ultra-low multi-pair emission probability even at maximum brightness. Here we report on the first implementation of the BBM92 protocol using a quantum dot source with an entanglement fidelity as high as 0.97(1). For a proof of principle, the key generation is performed between two buildings, connected by 350 metre long fiber, resulting in an average key rate of 135 bits/s and a…
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