Experimental composable security decoy-state quantum key distribution using time-phase encoding.

Quantum key distribution (QKD) promises provably secure communications. In order to improve the secret key rate, combining a biased basis choice with the decoy-state method is proposed. Concomitantly, there is a basis-independent detection efficiency condition, which usually cannot be satisfied in a practical system, such as the time-phase encoding. Fortunately, this flaw has been recently removed theoretically and experimentally in the four-intensity decoy-state BB84 QKD protocol using the fact that the expected yields of single-photon states prepared in two bases stay the same for a given measurement basis. However, the security proofs do not fully consider the finite-key effects for general attacks. In this work, we provide the rigorous finite-key security bounds in the universally composable framework for the four-intensity decoy-state BB84 QKD protocol. We build a time-phase encoding system with 200 MHz clock to implement this protocol, in which the real-time secret key rate is more than 60 kbps over 50 km single-mode fiber.

[1]  D. Vernon Inform , 1995, Encyclopedia of the UN Sustainable Development Goals.

[2]  G. G. Stokes "J." , 1890, The New Yale Book of Quotations.

[3]  Zach DeVito,et al.  Opt , 2017 .

[4]  奥仲 哲弥,et al.  肺門部早期肺癌に対する光線力学的治療法(肺門部早期癌の診断と治療)(第 18 回日本気管支学会総会特集号) , 1995 .

[5]  Tsuyoshi Murata,et al.  {m , 1934, ACML.

[6]  Ilgaitis Prūsis,et al.  Nature of Photon , 2019 .