A metropolitan-scale trapped-ion quantum network node with hybrid multiplexing enhancements

Abstract

Quantum network and quantum repeater are promising ways to scale up a quantum information system to enable various applications with unprecedented performance. As a current bottleneck of building a long-distance quantum network, the distribution rate of heralded entanglement between remote network nodes is typically much lower than the decoherence rate of each local node, which obstructs the implementation of a metropolitan-scale quantum network with more than two remote nodes. A promising scheme to accelerate the remote entanglement distribution is through multiplexing enhancement based on a multimode quantum network node. In this work, we experimentally realize a functional 5-ion quantum network node with two different types of qubits inside. We employ a hybrid multiplexing scheme combining the methods of multiple excitation and ion shuttling, in which maximally 44 time-bin modes are generated and sent through a long fiber to boost the entangling rate. Via this scheme, we can generate heralded ion-photon entanglement with a high fidelity of 96.8\%/94.6\%/89.8\% with a success rate of 263\,s-1/40\,s-1/4.28\,s-1, over a fiber of 3\,m/1\,km/12\,km, respectively. In addition, the memory qubit can protect the stored quantum information from the destructive ion-photon entangling attempts via dual-type encoding and a memory coherence time of 366\,ms is achieved. This coherence time has exceeded the expected entanglement generation time 234\,ms over a 12\,km fiber, which is realized for the first time in a metropolitan-scale quantum network node.

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