Print Email Facebook Twitter Benchmarking of quantum protocols Title Benchmarking of quantum protocols Author Liao, Chin Te (VeriQloud, Paris) Bahrani, Sima (The University of Edinburgh; University of Bristol) Horta Ferreira da Silva, F. (TU Delft QID/Wehner Group; TU Delft QuTech Advanced Research Centre; Kavli institute of nanoscience Delft) Kashefi, Elham (The University of Edinburgh; VeriQloud, Paris; Sorbonne Université) Date 2022 Abstract Quantum network protocols offer new functionalities such as enhanced security to communication and computational systems. Despite the rapid progress in quantum hardware, it has not yet reached a level of maturity that enables execution of many quantum protocols in practical settings. To develop quantum protocols in real world, it is necessary to examine their performance considering the imperfections in their practical implementation using simulation platforms. In this paper, we consider several quantum protocols that enable promising functionalities and services in near-future quantum networks. The protocols are chosen from both areas of quantum communication and quantum computation as follows: quantum money, W-state based anonymous transmission, verifiable blind quantum computation, and quantum digital signature. We use NetSquid simulation platform to evaluate the effect of various sources of noise on the performance of these protocols, considering different figures of merit. We find that to enable quantum money protocol, the decoherence time constant of the quantum memory must be at least three times the storage time of qubits. Furthermore, our simulation results for the w-state based anonymous transmission protocol show that to achieve an average fidelity above 0.8 in this protocol, the storage time of sender’s and receiver’s particles in the quantum memory must be less than half of the decoherence time constant of the quantum memory. We have also investigated the effect of gate imperfections on the performance of verifiable blind quantum computation. We find that with our chosen parameters, if the depolarizing probability of quantum gates is equal to or greater than 0.05, the security of the protocol cannot be guaranteed. Lastly, our simulation results for quantum digital signature protocol show that channel loss has a significant effect on the probability of repudiation. To reference this document use: http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:67842d57-caf4-43a3-863e-ab2e27a47536 DOI https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-022-08901-x ISSN 2045-2322 Source Scientific Reports, 12 (1) Part of collection Institutional Repository Document type journal article Rights © 2022 Chin Te Liao, Sima Bahrani, F. Horta Ferreira da Silva, Elham Kashefi Files PDF s41598_022_08901_x.pdf 2.11 MB Close viewer /islandora/object/uuid:67842d57-caf4-43a3-863e-ab2e27a47536/datastream/OBJ/view