Abstract

Quantum noise stream cipher based on quadrature-amplitude-modulation (QAM/QNSC) is a kind of physical layer encryption technology. However, the additional encryption penalty will significantly affect the practical deployment of QNSC, especially in the high capacity and long-haul transmission system. With our research, the encryption process of QAM/QNSC degrades the transmission performance of plaintext information. In this paper, we quantitatively analyze the encryption penalty of QAM/QNSC based on the proposed concept of effective minimum Euclidean distance. We calculate the theoretical signal-to-noise ratio sensitivity and encryption penalty of QAM/QNSC signals. A modified feedforward pilot-aided two-stage carrier phase recovery scheme is used to reduce the effect of laser phase noise and the encryption penalty. Experimental results achieve single-channel 205.9 Gbit/s 640km transmission with single carrier polarization-diversity-multiplexing 16-QAM/QNSC signal.

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