English

Experimental quantum key distribution with source flaws

Quantum Physics 2015-09-09 v2

Abstract

Decoy-state quantum key distribution (QKD) is a standard technique in current quantum cryptographic implementations. Unfortunately, existing experiments have two important drawbacks: the state preparation is assumed to be perfect without errors and the employed security proofs do not fully consider the finite-key effects for general attacks. These two drawbacks mean that existing experiments are not guaranteed to be secure in practice. Here, we perform an experiment that for the first time shows secure QKD with imperfect state preparations over long distances and achieves rigorous finite-key security bounds for decoy-state QKD against coherent attacks in the universally composable framework. We quantify the source flaws experimentally and demonstrate a QKD implementation that is tolerant to channel loss despite the source flaws. Our implementation considers more real-world problems than most previous experiments and our theory can be applied to general QKD systems. These features constitute a step towards secure QKD with imperfect devices.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1408.3667,
  title  = {Experimental quantum key distribution with source flaws},
  author = {Feihu Xu and Kejin Wei and Shihan Sajeed and Sarah Kaiser and Shihai Sun and Zhiyuan Tang and Li Qian and Vadim Makarov and Hoi-Kwong Lo},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1408.3667},
  year   = {2015}
}

Comments

12 pages, 4 figures, updated experiment and theory

R2 v1 2026-06-22T05:30:34.634Z