Physicists harness unlikely glass material to create a robust, versatile quantum security device, paving the way for practical quantum communication networks. By sciencedaily.com.
The study presents a significant advancement in quantum cryptography, demonstrating the potential of glass-based integrated photonics for practical quantum communication. The researchers created a fully tunable heterodyne receiver in borosilicate glass, featuring fixed and tunable beam splitters, thermo-optic phase shifters, three-dimensional waveguide crossings, and polarization-independent directional couplers. This device enables simultaneous measurement of the amplitude and phase of light waves, crucial for CV-QKD and CV-QRNG.
The glass-based receiver outperforms its silicon counterparts, exhibiting extremely low insertion loss (≈1 dB), polarization-independent operation, and a high common-mode rejection ratio (>73 dB). The device’s stability was proven by maintaining consistent signal-to-noise performance over at least 8 hours. Two major applications were demonstrated on a single chip: a source-device-independent QRNG system with a record-high secure generation rate of 42.7 Gbit/s, and a QPSK-based CV-QKD system achieving a 3.2 Mbit/s secure key rate over a 9.3-km fiber link.
The practical advantages of using glass in integrated quantum photonics include environmental stability, low-loss fiber coupling, 3D design flexibility, and scalability. These qualities support the long-term reliability and durability required for real-world deployment and potential use in space-based quantum communication systems. The researchers suggest that glass-based photonics could help close the gap between experimental setups and practical quantum networks, marking an important step toward building global quantum infrastructure. Excellent read!
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