Light: Science & Applications (Mar 2025)

Chip-integrated quantum signature network over 200 km

  • Yongqiang Du,
  • Bing-Hong Li,
  • Xin Hua,
  • Xiao-Yu Cao,
  • Zhengeng Zhao,
  • Feng Xie,
  • Zhenrong Zhang,
  • Hua-Lei Yin,
  • Xi Xiao,
  • Kejin Wei

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41377-025-01775-4
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 9

Abstract

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Abstract The development of quantum networks is paramount towards practical and secure communications. Quantum digital signatures (QDS) offer an information-theoretically secure solution for ensuring data integrity, authenticity, and non-repudiation, rapidly growing from proof-of-concept to robust demonstrations. However, previous QDS systems relied on expensive and bulky optical equipment, limiting large-scale deployment and reconfigurable networking construction. Here, we introduce and verify a chip-based QDS network, placing the complicated and expensive measurement devices in the central relay while each user needs only a low-cost transmitter. We demonstrate the network with a three-node setup using an integrated encoder chip and decoder chip. By developing a 1-decoy-state one-time universal hashing-QDS protocol, we achieve a maximum signature rate of 0.0414 times per second for a 1 Mbit messages over fiber distances up to 200 km, surpassing all current state-of-the-art QDS experiments. This study validates the feasibility of chip-based QDS, paving the way for large-scale deployment and integration with existing fiber infrastructure.