0
talks
2
posters
0
committee roles
0
leadership roles
2025–2025
years active
Posters
| Title | Conference | Co-authors |
|---|---|---|
| Gigabit-rate Quantum Key Distribution on Integrated Photonic Chips | QCRYPT 2025 | Florian Kanitschar, Gong Zhang, Chao Wang |
Quantum key distribution (QKD) provides information-theoretic security guaranteed by the laws of quantum mechanics, making it resistant to future computational threats, including quantum computers. While QKD technology shows great promise, its widespread adoption depends heavily on its usability and viability, with key rate performance and cost-effectiveness serving as critical evaluation metrics. In this work, we report an integrated silicon photonics-based QKD system that achieves a secret key rate of 1.213 Gbps over a metropolitan distance of 10 km with polarization multiplexing. Our contributions are twofold. First, in the quantum optical layer, we developed an on-chip quantum transmitter and an efficient quantum receiver that operate at 40 Gbaud/s at room temperature. Second, we designed a discrete-modulated continuous variable (DM CV) QKD implementation with efficient information reconciliation based on polar codes, enabling potentially high-throughput real-time data processing. Our results demonstrate a practical QKD solution that combines high performance with cost efficiency. We anticipate this research will pave the way for large-scale quantum secure networks. |
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| Self-testing Quantum Randomness Expansion using Silicon Photonic Chip | QCRYPT 2025 | Gong Zhang, Ignatius William Primaatmaja, Yue Chen, Hong Jie Ng, Xiao Gong, Koon Tong Goh, Chao Wang, Charles Lim |
The power of quantum random number generation is more than just the ability to create truly random numbers. It can also enable self-testing, which allows the user to verify the implementation integrity of critical quantum components with minimal assumptions. In this work, we develop and implement a self-testing quantum random number generator (QRNG) chipset capable of generating 15.33 Mbits of certifiable randomness in each run, producing an expansion rate of 5.11×10-4 at a repetition rate of 10 MHz. The chip design is based on a highly loss-and-noise tolerant measurement-device-independent protocol, where random coherent states encoded using quadrature phase shift keying (QPSK) are used to self-test the quantum homodyne detection unit, well-known to be challenging to characterise in practice. Importantly, this proposal opens up the possibility to implement miniaturised self-testing QRNG devices at production scale using standard silicon photonics foundry platforms. |
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Collaborators
| Co-author | Joint talks |
|---|---|
| Chao Wang | 2 |
| Gong Zhang | 2 |
| Charles Lim | 1 |
| Florian Kanitschar | 1 |
| Hong Jie Ng | 1 |
| Ignatius William Primaatmaja | 1 |
| Koon Tong Goh | 1 |
| Xiao Gong | 1 |
| Yue Chen | 1 |