Ultra-Large-Capacity Passive Quantum Access Network Powered By Single Thermal Source
Yuehan Xu, Qijun Zhang, Xiaojuan Liao, Zidong Gao, Piao Tan, Xufeng Liang, Hanwen Yin, Peng Huang, Tao Wang, and Guihua Zeng

TL;DR
This paper introduces a passive quantum access network utilizing a single thermal source to support over 300 users with a high secret key rate, bridging the performance gap between classical and quantum networks.
Contribution
It proposes a novel thermal-state quantum access network design that significantly increases user capacity and secret key rate using broadband thermal states and broadcast techniques.
Findings
Supports 304 users with 13 Gbps secret key rate
Verifies experimental implementation with continuous-variable QKD
Achieves capacity and security benchmarks for modern telecommunication
Abstract
Quantum Key Distribution (QKD) provides secure keys for classical communications through one-time-pad (OTP) encryption with physical-law security. Advanced PON-based Classical Access Networks (CANs) support up to 256 users with a total rate of 10 Gbps (10-Gbps @ 256-users). The equivalent rate demand of OTP encryption requires QKD Access Networks (QANs) to reach comparable performance, yet state-of-the-art PON-based QANs remain far from this standard. To address this gap, we propose a passive Thermal-State QAN (TS-QAN) distributing polychromatic quantum randomness from a single thermal source and supporting 304 users with an aggregate secret key rate (SKR) of 13 Gbps (13-Gbps @ 304-users). This performance is enabled by three features. First, broadband thermal states with Bose-Einstein statistics can be represented, through the Glauber-Sudarshan representation, as high-bandwidth…
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