English

Scalable twin-field quantum key distribution network enabled by adaptable architecture

Quantum Physics 2025-05-28 v2

Abstract

Quantum key distribution (QKD) is a key application in quantum communication, enabling secure key exchange between parties using quantum states. Twin-field (TF) QKD offers a promising solution that surpasses the repeaterless limits, and its measurement-device-independent nature makes it suitable for star-type network architectures. In this work, we propose a scalable TF-QKD network with adaptable architecture, where users prepare quantum signals and send them to network nodes. These nodes use an optical switch to route the signals to multi-user measurement units, enabling secure key distribution among arbitrary users and adapting to complex connection demands of the network. A proof-of-principle demonstration with three users successfully achieved secure key sharing over simulated link losses of up to 3030 dB, with an average rate of 19.5719.57 bit/s. Additionally, simulations show that the proposed architecture can achieve a total secure key rate of 4.84×1044.84 \times 10^{4} bit/s at 100100 km in a symmetric 3232-user network. This approach represents a significant advancement in the topology of untrusted-node QKD networks and holds promise for practical, large-scale applications in secure communication.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2504.15137,
  title  = {Scalable twin-field quantum key distribution network enabled by adaptable architecture},
  author = {Chunfeng Huang and Rui Guan and Xin Liu and Wenjie He and Shizhuo Li and Hao Liang and Ziyang Luo and Zhenrong Zhang and Wei Li and Kejin Wei},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2504.15137},
  year   = {2025}
}

Comments

This version is revised based on helpful comments received, including changes to the title, network architecture, and simulation results

R2 v1 2026-06-28T23:05:51.671Z