High-speed single-photon signaling for daytime QKD

ORAL

Abstract

The distribution of quantum-generated cryptographic key at high throughputs can be critically limited by the performance of the systems' single-photon detectors. While noise and afterpulsing are considerations for all single-photon QKD systems, high-transmission rate systems also have critical detector timing-resolution and recovery time requirements. We present experimental results exploiting the high timing resolution and count-rate stability of modified single-photon avalanche diodes (SPADs) in our GHz QKD system operating over a 1.5 km free-space link that demonstrate the ability to apply extremely short temporal gates, enabling daytime free-space QKD with a 4{\%} QBER.\footnote{A. Restelli, J.C. Bienfang A. Mink, and C.W. Clark, \textit{IEEE J. Sel. Topics in Quant. Electron} \textbf{16}, 1084 (2010).} We also discuss recent advances in gating techniques for InGaAs SPADs that are suitable for high-speed fiber-based QKD. We present afterpulse-probability measurements that demonstrate the ability to support single-photon count rates above 100 MHz with low afterpulse probability. These results will benefit the design and characterization of free-space and fiber QKD systems.

Authors

  • Joshua Bienfang

    NIST/JQI

  • Alessandro Restelli

    NIST/JQI

  • Charles Clark

    NIST/JQI