Abstract
In comparison with the rapidly developing progress on the optical C-band (1525-1565 nm) master-to-slave injection-locked transmitter to perform the coherent single-photon quantum key distribution (QKD), the development on the O-band (1250-1350 nm) QKD transmitter is somewhat delayed as the commercially available wavelength-matched narrow-linewidth distributed feedback laser diode (DFBLD) pair is hardly accessible up to now. By using the DFBLDs with only sub-MHz linewidth and relatively deviated wavelength for the first time, this work demonstrates the optically differential-phase-shift-keying (DPS) QKD by an O-band master-to-slave injection-locked DFBLD pair. The master and slave DFBLDs with wavelength fluctuations of ±0.05% and ±0.2 pm are controlled by a thermo-electric cooler with a feedback gain of 100. The 1-bit delay interferometer (DI) under thermo-insulation maintains its visibility at >96% with dPo/Po and dPo/dt measured below ±0.1% and ±1 × 10−3 mW/s. By RZ-OOK modulating the master DFBLD with step-like power coding at 150 µW to induce π phase shift in the injection-locked slave DFBLD, the rising-/falling-edge DPS envelope distortion of the slave DFBLD diminishes by decreasing the bias current of the master DFBLD from 7Ith (35 mA) to 2Ith (10 mA). This phenomenon enables the 128-bit DPS-QKD transmission with a quantum bit-error rate (QBER) of 3.57% and a secure key rate of 3.524 kbit/s in the 6-km SMF link. The O-band injection-locked single-photon DPS-QKD bit-stream with a mean photon number of 0.2 #/bit minimizes its decoding QBER to 3.88% and 4.84% for 512-bit and 1024-bit, respectively.
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