5
talks
2
posters
0
committee roles
0
leadership roles
2018–2025
years active
Contributions
QIP QCrypt TQC presenter award · △program ◇steering ○organising □local · filled = chair
Talks
Posters
| Title | Conference | Co-authors |
|---|---|---|
| Experimental practical quantum tokens with transaction time advantage | QCRYPT 2025 | Yang-Fan Jiang, Adrian Kent, Damián Pitalúa-García, Xiaochen Yao, Xiao-Han Chen, Jia Huang, George Cowperthwaite, Qibin Zheng, Hao Li, Yang Liu, Qiang Zhang, Jian-Wei Pan |
Quantum money is the first invention in quantum information science, promising advantages over classical money by simultaneously achieving unforgeability, user privacy, and instant validation. However, standard quantum money relies on quantum memories and long-distance quantum communication, which are technologically extremely challenging. Quantum "S-money" tokens eliminate these technological requirements while preserving unforgeability, user privacy, and instant validation. Here, we report the first full experimental demonstration of quantum S-tokens, proven secure despite errors, losses and experimental imperfections. The heralded single-photon source with a high system efficiency of 88.24% protects against arbitrary multi-photon attacks arising from losses in the quantum token generation. Following short-range quantum communication, the token is stored, transacted, and verified using classical bits. We demonstrate a transaction time advantage over intra-city 2.77 km and inter-city 60.54 km optical fibre networks, compared with optimal classical cross-checking schemes. Our implementation demonstrates the practicality of quantum S-tokens for applications requiring high security, privacy and minimal transaction times, like financial trading and network control. It is also the first demonstration of a quantitative quantum time advantage in relativistic cryptography, showing the enhanced cryptographic power of simultaneously considering quantum and relativistic physics. |
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| 1002 km Twin-Field Quantum Key Distribution with Finite-Key Analysis | QCRYPT 2024 | Yang Liu, Wei-Jun Zhang, Cong Jiang, Jiu-Peng Chen, Di Ma, Chi Zhang, Wen-Xin Pan, Hao Dong, Jia-Min Xiong, Cheng-Jun Zhang, Hao Li, Rui-Chun Wang, Chao-Yang Lu, Jun Wu, Teng-Yun Chen, Xiang-Bin Wang, Qiang Zhang, Jian-Wei Pan |
Quantum key distribution (QKD) holds the potential to establish secure keys over long distances. The distance of point-to-point QKD secure key distribution is primarily impeded by the transmission loss inherent to the channel. In the quest to realize a large-scale quantum network, increasing the QKD distance under current technology is of great research interest. Here we adopt the 3-intensity sending-or-not-sending twin-field QKD (TF-QKD) protocol with the actively-odd-parity-pairing method. The experiment demonstrates the feasibility of secure QKD over a 1002 km fibre channel considering the finite size effect. The secure key rate is $3.11 10^{-12}$ per pulse at this distance. Furthermore, by optimizing parameters for shorter fiber distances, we conducted performance tests on key distribution for fiber lengths ranging from 202 km to 505 km. Notably, the secure key rate for the 202 km, the normal distance between major cities, reached 111.74 kbps. |
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Collaborators
| Co-author | Joint talks |
|---|---|
| Hao Li | 7 |
| Jian-Wei Pan | 6 |
| Qiang Zhang | 6 |
| Yang Liu | 5 |
| Zhen Wang | 5 |
| Cheng-Zhi Peng | 3 |
| Sheng-Kai Liao | 3 |
| Wei-Jun Zhang | 3 |
| Xiang-Bin Wang | 3 |
| Chao-Yang Lu | 2 |
| Chi Zhang | 2 |
| Feihu Xu | 2 |
| Hao Tan | 2 |
| Jia Huang | 2 |
| Jian-Yu Guan | 2 |
| Jiu-Peng Chen | 2 |
| Teng-Yun Chen | 2 |
| Wei Li | 2 |
| Weijun Zhang | 2 |
| Xiao Jiang | 2 |