A building block of quantum repeaters for scalable quantum networks
Wen-Zhao Liu, Ya-Bin Zhou, Jiu-Peng Chen, Bin Wang, Ao Teng, Xiao-Wen Han, Guang-Cheng Liu, Zhi-Jiong Zhang, Yi Yang, Feng-Guang Liu, ChaoHui Xue, Bo-Wen Yang, Jin Yang, Chao Zeng, Du-Ruo Pan, Ming-Yang Zheng, Xing-Jian Zhang, Cao Shen, Yi-Zheng Zhen, You Xiao, Hao Li

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates a quantum repeater component using long-lived trapped-ion memories and efficient interfaces, enabling secure quantum communication over metropolitan distances and advancing scalable quantum networks.
Contribution
It introduces a novel quantum repeater building block with enhanced memory coherence and telecom interfacing, overcoming previous distance limitations.
Findings
Memory-memory entanglement maintained over 10 km fiber
Demonstrated metropolitan-scale DI-QKD with 1,917 secret keys
Extended quantum communication distance beyond 100 km
Abstract
Quantum networks, integrating quantum communication, quantum metrology, and distributed quantum computing, could provide secure and efficient information transfer, high-resolution sensing, and an exponential speed-up in information processing. Deterministic entanglement distribution over long distances is a prerequisite for scalable quantum networks, enabling the utilization of device-independent quantum key distribution (DI-QKD) and quantum teleportation to achieve secure and efficient information transfer. However, the exponential photon loss in optical fibres prohibits efficient and deterministic entanglement distribution. Quantum repeaters, incorporating entanglement swapping and entanglement purification with quantum memories, offer the most promising means to overcome this limitation in fibre-based quantum networks. Despite numerous pioneering efforts toward realizing quantum…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Information and Cryptography · Quantum optics and atomic interactions · Quantum Computing Algorithms and Architecture
