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Autores principales: Guan, Rui, Yu, Jingchun, Li, Zhaoyun, Xie, Hongbo, Wei, Yuxing, Li, Sen, Wen, Jing, Liang, Xiaodong, Li, Yanwei, Wei, Kejin
Formato: Preprint
Publicado: 2025
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Acceso en línea:https://arxiv.org/abs/2510.17659
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author Guan, Rui
Yu, Jingchun
Li, Zhaoyun
Xie, Hongbo
Wei, Yuxing
Li, Sen
Wen, Jing
Liang, Xiaodong
Li, Yanwei
Wei, Kejin
author_facet Guan, Rui
Yu, Jingchun
Li, Zhaoyun
Xie, Hongbo
Wei, Yuxing
Li, Sen
Wen, Jing
Liang, Xiaodong
Li, Yanwei
Wei, Kejin
contents Quantum key distribution (QKD) is a cryptographic technique that uses quantum mechanical principles to enable secure key exchange. Practical deployment of QKD requires robust, cost-effective systems that can operate in challenging field environments. A major challenge is achieving reliable clock synchronization without adding hardware complexity. Conventional approaches often use separate classical light signals, which increase costs and introduce noise that degrades quantum channel performance. To address this limitation, we demonstrate a QKD system incorporating a recently proposed qubit-based distributed frame synchronization method, deployed over a metropolitan fiber network in Nanning, China. Using the polarization-encoded one-decoy-state BB84 protocol and the recently proposed qubit-based distributed frame synchronization method, our system achieves synchronization directly from the quantum signal, eliminating the need for dedicated synchronization hardware. Furthermore, to counteract dynamic polarization disturbances in urban fibers, the system integrates qubit-based polarization feedback control, enabling real-time polarization compensation through an automated polarization controller using data recovered from the qubit-based synchronization signals. During 12 hours of continuous operation, the system maintained a low average quantum bit error rate (QBER) of 1.12/%, achieving a secure key rate of 26.6 kbit/s under 18 dB channel loss. Even under a high channel loss of 40 dB, a finite-key secure rate of 115 bit/s was achieved. This study represents the first successful long-term validation of a frame-synchronization based QKD scheme in a real urban environment, demonstrating exceptional stability and high-loss tolerance, and offering an alternative for building practical, scalable, and cost-efficient quantum-secure communication networks.
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spellingShingle Field-Trial Quantum Key Distribution with Qubit-Based Frame Synchronization
Guan, Rui
Yu, Jingchun
Li, Zhaoyun
Xie, Hongbo
Wei, Yuxing
Li, Sen
Wen, Jing
Liang, Xiaodong
Li, Yanwei
Wei, Kejin
Quantum Physics
Quantum key distribution (QKD) is a cryptographic technique that uses quantum mechanical principles to enable secure key exchange. Practical deployment of QKD requires robust, cost-effective systems that can operate in challenging field environments. A major challenge is achieving reliable clock synchronization without adding hardware complexity. Conventional approaches often use separate classical light signals, which increase costs and introduce noise that degrades quantum channel performance. To address this limitation, we demonstrate a QKD system incorporating a recently proposed qubit-based distributed frame synchronization method, deployed over a metropolitan fiber network in Nanning, China. Using the polarization-encoded one-decoy-state BB84 protocol and the recently proposed qubit-based distributed frame synchronization method, our system achieves synchronization directly from the quantum signal, eliminating the need for dedicated synchronization hardware. Furthermore, to counteract dynamic polarization disturbances in urban fibers, the system integrates qubit-based polarization feedback control, enabling real-time polarization compensation through an automated polarization controller using data recovered from the qubit-based synchronization signals. During 12 hours of continuous operation, the system maintained a low average quantum bit error rate (QBER) of 1.12/%, achieving a secure key rate of 26.6 kbit/s under 18 dB channel loss. Even under a high channel loss of 40 dB, a finite-key secure rate of 115 bit/s was achieved. This study represents the first successful long-term validation of a frame-synchronization based QKD scheme in a real urban environment, demonstrating exceptional stability and high-loss tolerance, and offering an alternative for building practical, scalable, and cost-efficient quantum-secure communication networks.
title Field-Trial Quantum Key Distribution with Qubit-Based Frame Synchronization
topic Quantum Physics
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2510.17659