The focus of this research activity is to work on pragmatic information reconciliation applied to QKD schemes based on single photon or weak pulse laser (WPL) sources, so as to use feed-forward techniques which minimize the interaction between transmitter and receiver. The core ideas of the thesis are employing Forward Error Correction (FEC) coding as opposed to two-way communication for information reconciliation in QKD schemes, exploiting all the available information for data processing at the receiver including information available from the quantum channel, since optimized use of this information can lead to significant performance improvement, and providing a security versus secret-key rate trade-off to the end-user within the context of QKD systems. Moreover, as shown by accurate experimental studies, the communication channel used for quantum key exchange is not able to reach high levels of reliability (the Quantum Bit Error Rate -QBER may have a high value), both because of the inherent characteristics of the system, and of the presence of a possible attacker. In order to obtain acceptable residual error rates, it is necessary to use a parallel classical and public channel, characterized by high transmission rates and low error rates, on which to transmit only the redundancy bits of systematic channel codes with performance possibly close to the capacity limit. Furthermore, since the more redundancy is added by the channel code, the more the corresponding information can be used to decipher the private message itself, it becomes necessary to design high-rate codes obtained by puncturing a low-rate mother code, possibly achieving a redundancy such that elements of the secret message cannot be uniquely determined from the redundancy itself, so for that purpose we designed high rate LDPC codes. Using high rate codes increases the security with trade-off to performance. Other low photon number applications have also been considered, such as weak-laser pulses (WLP) communication. For that purpose, a low-complexity photon-counting receiver has been considered which may be employed in long-distance amplification-free classical optical communication schemes, and which is typically modeled as an equivalent Binary Symmetric Channel (BSC). We have developed a time varying Binary Input-Multiple Output (BIMO) channel model for this low-complexity photon-counting receiver, and analyzed its performance in presence of soft-metric based capacity approaching iteratively decoded error correcting codes, such as soft-metric based Low Density Parity Check (LDPC) codes and polar codes. We show that the classical channel capacity of the suggested BIMO model is higher than the capacity of the BSC model, and that the use of the BIMO model allows to feed the channel decoder with soft information, in the form of Log-Likelihood Ratios (LLRs), achieving a significant reduction in Bit Error Rate (BER) and Frame Error Rate (FER) with respect to classical hard-metric-based schemes which should be used in conjunction with a BSC channel model.

"Soft Decoding Techniques for Quantum Key Distribution (QKD) and Weak Energy Optical Communication" / Bari, Inam. - (2014). [10.6092/polito/porto/2531893]

"Soft Decoding Techniques for Quantum Key Distribution (QKD) and Weak Energy Optical Communication"

BARI, INAM
2014

Abstract

The focus of this research activity is to work on pragmatic information reconciliation applied to QKD schemes based on single photon or weak pulse laser (WPL) sources, so as to use feed-forward techniques which minimize the interaction between transmitter and receiver. The core ideas of the thesis are employing Forward Error Correction (FEC) coding as opposed to two-way communication for information reconciliation in QKD schemes, exploiting all the available information for data processing at the receiver including information available from the quantum channel, since optimized use of this information can lead to significant performance improvement, and providing a security versus secret-key rate trade-off to the end-user within the context of QKD systems. Moreover, as shown by accurate experimental studies, the communication channel used for quantum key exchange is not able to reach high levels of reliability (the Quantum Bit Error Rate -QBER may have a high value), both because of the inherent characteristics of the system, and of the presence of a possible attacker. In order to obtain acceptable residual error rates, it is necessary to use a parallel classical and public channel, characterized by high transmission rates and low error rates, on which to transmit only the redundancy bits of systematic channel codes with performance possibly close to the capacity limit. Furthermore, since the more redundancy is added by the channel code, the more the corresponding information can be used to decipher the private message itself, it becomes necessary to design high-rate codes obtained by puncturing a low-rate mother code, possibly achieving a redundancy such that elements of the secret message cannot be uniquely determined from the redundancy itself, so for that purpose we designed high rate LDPC codes. Using high rate codes increases the security with trade-off to performance. Other low photon number applications have also been considered, such as weak-laser pulses (WLP) communication. For that purpose, a low-complexity photon-counting receiver has been considered which may be employed in long-distance amplification-free classical optical communication schemes, and which is typically modeled as an equivalent Binary Symmetric Channel (BSC). We have developed a time varying Binary Input-Multiple Output (BIMO) channel model for this low-complexity photon-counting receiver, and analyzed its performance in presence of soft-metric based capacity approaching iteratively decoded error correcting codes, such as soft-metric based Low Density Parity Check (LDPC) codes and polar codes. We show that the classical channel capacity of the suggested BIMO model is higher than the capacity of the BSC model, and that the use of the BIMO model allows to feed the channel decoder with soft information, in the form of Log-Likelihood Ratios (LLRs), achieving a significant reduction in Bit Error Rate (BER) and Frame Error Rate (FER) with respect to classical hard-metric-based schemes which should be used in conjunction with a BSC channel model.
2014
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11583/2531893
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