Toshiba Newsroom

Read the latest news and announcements about our product and service solutions.

Toshiba Redefines the Limit of Intercity Secure Communications

PRESS RELEASE – 2 May 2018
Twin-Field QKD allows secure quantum key distribution over 500 km of optical fibre

Cambridge, UK, 2 May 2018: The Cambridge Research Laboratory of Toshiba Research Europe Ltd today announced that it has devised a new protocol for quantum key distribution (QKD) that will extend its range to over 500 km of standard telecom fibre. This advance, called Twin-Field QKD, enables the protection of sensitive data transmitted in optical networks between cities. It would allow a secure link between cities like London, Paris, Brussels, Amsterdam or Dublin. The details of the breakthrough are published today in the scientific journal, Nature.

QKD can be used to distribute the secret digital keys important for protecting our personal data, such as bank statements, health records, and digital identity. Its security relies on encoding each bit of the key upon a single photon (particle of light) transmitted, e.g., through an ordinary optical fibre. As any attempt to read the photons alters their encoding, this allows the secrecy of each key to be tested and guaranteed. Unlike other existing security solutions, quantum cryptography is secure from all future advances in mathematics and computing, even from the number crunching abilities of a quantum computer. It is therefore expected to be an essential tool for protecting communication infrastructure from cyber-attacks in the future and putting businesses on the front foot when it comes to protecting operation-critical information.

Up until now, the typical range of QKD has been limited to a few hundred kilometers of optical fibre. This is because the photons carrying the information can be scattered and thereby lost from the fibre, reducing the rate at which secret keys can be formed.

Now, Toshiba has discovered a way to enhance key rate and transmission distance of QKD, potentially allowing fibre links beyond 500 km for the first time. The final secure key rate can be orders of magnitude greater than that obtainable with existing protocols.1. In fact the key rate and distance achievable with the new method exceeds the secret key capacity previously thought to be a limit that cannot be overcome without using a quantum repeater.

In conventional QKD, single photons are sent from one end of the fibre to the other end. In contrast, for Twin-Field QKD, light pulses are sent from both ends of the fibre to a central location, where a photon is detected. Provided it is impossible to tell which end of the fibre the photon came from, this technique effectively doubles the transmission distance at a given rate. Although conventional systems may be daisy-chained together to increase the total transmission distance, this requires that the intermediate stations are in a secure location. In contrast, no physical protection in the central location is necessary for the security of Twin-Field QKD.

“Twin-Field QKD would enable a bank in London to connect to a data centre in Leeds via a link that can guarantee the secure transmission of customer data”, comments Dr. Andrew Shields, Assistant Managing Director at the Cambridge Research Laboratory. “At present, the bank would have to place trust in intermediate nodes at secure, guarded locations between London and Leeds. Our breakthrough means that businesses can create a QKD network that connects their sites across the country for the first time.”

The team intends to demonstrate the viability of the new protocol experimentally in the coming year.

For further information about the work of Toshiba’s Quantum Information Group, go to www.quantum.toshiba.co.uk/

Professor Tim Whitley, head of research for BT, and MD of Adastral Park, said: “This is a further important step in the commercial development of quantum cryptography. Our secure quantum communication showcase at Adastral Park already demonstrates how financial institutions can secure links between offices and branches and off-site data centres, which are prevalent throughout the financial sector. The application of twin-field QKD would extend that capability to sites anywhere in Europe, for example, making it possible to securely network an organisation at a national and international level.”

1 example, the longest demonstration of QKD to date, over 404km of special low loss fibre (equivalent to 323.2 km of standard fibre), had a secure key rate of 0.32 milli-bit/sec (1.15 bit/hour). For the new protocol a bit rate in excess of 100 bits/sec is expected for the same channel loss.

— End —

About Toshiba

As Toshiba Group celebrates its 150th anniversary in 2025, it is enhancing its management structure, streamlining operations, and investing in forward-looking businesses to build foundations for new growth. This will allow it to continue to support advances toward a sustainable future with products and services developed by its wide range of businesses in the energy, infrastructure, and electronic devices domains.

Guided by its corporate philosophy, “Committed to People, Committed to the Future,” Toshiba brings industry-leading capabilities in green transformation (GX) and digital transformation (DX) to solutions for companies addressing the many challenges faced by modern society. By leveraging the power of data derived from its constantly evolving products and solutions, the Group is determined to help to achieve carbon neutrality and a circular economy. In fiscal year 2023, Toshiba Group generated annual sales of 3.3 trillion yen, and had 105,000 employees around the world.

Latest Publications

Information contained in news and other announcements is current on the date of posting, but subject to change without notice.

Quantum Information Group
2024

Davide G. Marangon, Peter R. Smith, Nathan Walk, Taofiq K. Paraïso, James F. Dynes, Victor Lovic, Mirko Sanzaro, Thomas Roger, Innocenzo De Marco, Marco Lucamarini, Zhiliang Yuan & Andrew J. Shields

Nature Electronics Volume 7, pages 396–404, (2024)
2023

P. Gavignet ORA, F. Mondain ORA, E. Pincemin ORA, A. J. Grant T, L. Johnson T, R. I. Woodward T, J. F. Dynes T, and A. J. Shields T

Optical Fiber Communication Conference 2023 San Diego California United States 5–9 March 2023
2023

R. I. Woodward T, B. Griffiths T, Y. S. Lo T, J. F. Dynes T and A. J. Shields

Optical Fiber Communication Conference
2023

A.Barbiero T, G. Shooter T, T. Müller T, J.Skiba-Szymanska T, R.M. Stevenson T, L. E. Goff CAV, D. A. Ritchie CAV and A. J. Shields T

Nano Letters 2024 24 (9), 2839-2845
2023

J. A. Dolphin T, ENG, T. K. Paraiso T, H. Du T, and A. J. Shields T

CLEO: Applications and Technology 2023 San Jose, CA United States 7–12 May 2023
2023

T. Roger T, R. Singh T, C. Perumangatt T , D. G. Marangon T, P. R. Smith T , M. Sanzaro T, R. I. Woodward T, and A. J. Shields T

Science Advances 1 Dec 2023 Vol 9, Issue 48 DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.adj5873
2023

S. Donadello, C. Clivati, A. Meda, S. Virzì, M. Genovese, F. Levi, A. Mura, M. Pittaluga, Z. Yuan, A. J. Shields, M. Lucamarini, I. P. Degiovanni, and D. Calonico,

Quantum 2.0 Conference and Exhibition, Technical Digest Series (Optica Publishing Group, 2022), paper QTu4C.3. (13-16 June 2022)
2023

R. Singh T, C. Perumangatt T, T. Roger T and A. J. Shields T

CLEO: Applications and Technology 2023 San Jose, CA United States 7–12 May 2023
2023

T Paraiso T

npj Quantum Information volume 9, Article number: 84 (2023)
2023

J. A. Dolphin T, ENG, T. K. Paraïso T, H. Du T, R. I. Woodward T, D. G. Marangon T and A. J. Shields T

npj Quantum Information volume 9, Article number: 84 (2023)
Vision & Learning Group
2025

F Logothetis, I Budvytis, R Cipolla

WACV 2025
2025

S Morad, C Lu, R Kortvelesy, S Liwicki, J Foerster, A Prorok

NeurIPS 2024
2023

S Morad, R Kortvelesy, S Liwicki, A Prorok,

NeurIPS 2023
2023

C Zhang, S Liwicki, S He, W Smith, R Cipolla

In TPAMI
2023

S Morad, R Kortvelesy, M Bettini, S Liwicki, A Prorok

ICLR May 2023
2022

Contrastive Unsupervised Learning of World Model with Invariant Causal Features

R. P. K. Poudel, H. Pandya, R. Cipolla
NeurIPS Workshop, December 2022

2022

A. Paren, R. P. K. Poudel

BMVC, November 2022
2022

C. Zhang, S. Liwicki, R. Cipolla

BMVC, November 2022
2022

F. Logothetis, R. Mecca, I. Budvytis, R. Cipolla

International Journal of Computer Vision
2022

A. Paren, R. P. K. Poudel, M. Pawan Kumar

Transactions of Machine Learning Research
2022

H. Sankhla, M. Qureshi, S. Narayanan, V. Mittal, G. Gupta, H. Pandya, KM. Krishna

CASE, August 2022
2022

S. Morad, S. Liwicki, R. Kortvelesy, R. Mecca, A. Prorok

arXiv
Language & Interaction Group
2025

Norbert Braunschweiler, Rama Doddipatla, Tudor-Catalin Zorila

Proceedings of the 3rd Workshop on Towards Knowledgeable Foundation Models (KnowFM) at ACL 2025, Vienna, Austria
2025

Youmna Farag, Svetlana Stoyanchev, Mohan Li, Simon Keizer, Rama Doddipatla

First Workshop for Research on Agent Language Models (REALM) at ACL 2025, Vienna, Austria
2025

Cong Thanh Do, Yuan Li, Simon Keizer, Mohan Li, Rama Doddipatla, Kate Knill

Proc. UK and Ireland Speech Workshop 2025, June 16-17, 2025, York, UK
2024

A. Frummet, A. Papenmeier, M. Fröbe, J. Kiesel, V. Adlakha, N. BraunschweilerT, M.Dubiel, S. Ghosh, M. Gohsen, C. Kreutz, M. Momeni, M. Nilles, S. P. Cherumanal, A.Pirmoradi, P. Thomas, J. R. Trippas, I. Zelch, and O. Zendel.

Report published in SIGIR Forum 58, 1 (June 2024), 1–12.
2024

Abigail Sticha, Norbert Braunschweiler, Rama Sanand Doddipatla, Kate M Knill

CUI ’24: Proceedings of the 6th ACM Conference on Conversational User Interfaces
2024

Improving Retrieval-Augmented Response Generation in Goal-Oriented Dialogue Question Answering

N. BraunschweilerT, A. Sticha, R. Doddipatla, K. Knill

Presented at the UK-Ireland Speech Workshop (UKISpeech 2024) in Cambridge, UK
2024

Lexin Zhou, Youmna Farag, Andreas Vlachos.

Proc. of the 2024 Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing (EMNLP 2024), July 2024
2024

L. Domingo, P. Piwek, M. Wermelinger, S. Stoyanchev

28th Workshop on the Semantics and Pragmatics of Dialogue (SEMDIAL 2024).
2024

M. Li, S. Keizer and R. Doddipatla

Proc. of Interspeech 2024, Kos Island, Greece, September 2024
2024

C. Li, C. Zhang , S. Teufel, R. Doddipatla , S.Stoyanchev

Joint International Conference on Computational Linguistics, Language Resources and Evaluation (LREC-COLING 2024), May 2024
2024

T. Cord-Landwehr, C. Boeddeker, T-C Zoril?a, R. Doddipatla and R. Haeb-Umbach

2024 International Conference on Acoustics, Speech, and Signal Processing (ICASSP 2024), Seoul, Korea, April 2024
2024

Mohan Li, Cong-Thanh Do, Simon Keizer, Youmna Farag, Svetlana Stoyanchev, Rama Doddipatla

2024 IEEE Spoken Language Technology Workshop (SLT)
2024

Towards Interactive Anomaly Detection using Natural Language

Callum Rothon, S. Keizer , R. Doddipatla , N. Dethlefs

14th International Workshop on Spoken Dialogue Systems Technology (IWSDS 2024), Sapporo, Japan, March 2024
2024

Cong Thanh Do, Shuhei Imai, Rama Doddipatla, Thomas Hain

Proc. 32nd European Signal Processing Conference (EUSIPCO 2024), August 26-30, 2024, Lyon, France
2024

Going beyond word-similarity in evaluating document-grounded response generation in task-oriented dialogue

A. Sticha, Braunschweiler, R. Doddipatla

14th International Workshop on Spoken Dialogue Systems Technology (IWSDS 2024), Sapporo, Japan, March 2024

Contact Us

Vacancies

Newsroom

Global R & D

Scroll to Top