Surpassing the currently achievable distance of quantum key distribution based on sending-or-not-sending approach

Abstract

Protocols based on the sending-or-not-sending (SNS) principle have been intensively studied in recent years and have been shown to enable the longest transmission distances in quantum key distribution (QKD). In this work, we propose a sending-or-not-sending phase-matching QKD protocol (SNS-PM-QKD) that improves tolerance to phase mismatch, thereby extending the achievable transmission distance. We present a security analysis of SNS-PM-QKD in the asymptotic (infinite-key) regime under collective attacks. The performance of the proposed protocol is compared with that of standard phase-matching QKD, theoretical SNS-type twin-field QKD protocols (SNS-TF-QKD), and an experimental SNS-TF-QKD operated over transmission distances of up to 1002km. Our results show that SNS-PM-QKD achieves greater transmission distances than these existing protocols, highlighting its potential for long-distance quantum communication.

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