Penn Engineers Transmit Quantum Signals Via Internet Protocol

University of Pennsylvania School of Engineering and Applied Science

In a first-of-its-kind experiment, engineers at the University of Pennsylvania brought quantum networking out of the lab and onto commercial fiber-optic cables using the same Internet Protocol (IP) that powers today's web. Reported in Science , the work shows that fragile quantum signals can run on the same infrastructure that carries everyday online traffic. The team tested their approach on Verizon's campus fiber-optic network.

The Penn team's tiny "Q-chip" coordinates quantum and classical data and, crucially, speaks the same language as the modern web. That approach could pave the way for a future "quantum internet," which scientists believe may one day be as transformative as the dawn of the online era.

Quantum signals rely on pairs of "entangled" particles, so closely linked that changing one instantly affects the other. Harnessing that property could allow quantum computers to link up and pool their processing power, enabling advances like faster, more energy-efficient AI or designing new drugs and materials beyond the reach of today's supercomputers.

Penn's work shows, for the first time on live commercial fiber, that a chip can not only send quantum signals but also automatically correct for noise, bundle quantum and classical data into standard internet-style packets, and route them using the same addressing system and management tools that connect everyday devices online.

"By showing an integrated chip can manage quantum signals on a live commercial network like Verizon's, and do so using the same protocols that run the classical internet, we've taken a key step toward larger-scale experiments and a practical quantum internet," says Liang Feng , Professor in Materials Science and Engineering (MSE) and in Electrical and Systems Engineering (ESE), and the Science paper's senior author.

The Challenges of Scaling the Quantum Internet

Erwin Schrodinger, who coined the term "quantum entanglement," famously related the concept to a cat hidden in a box. If the lid is closed, and the box also contains radioactive material, the cat could be alive or dead. One way to interpret the situation is that the cat is both alive and dead. Only opening the box confirms the cat's state.

That paradox is roughly analogous to the unique nature of quantum particles. Once measured, they lose their unusual properties, which makes scaling a quantum network extremely difficult.

"Normal networks measure data to guide it towards the ultimate destination," says Robert Broberg , a doctoral student in ESE and coauthor of the paper. "With purely quantum networks, you can't do that, because measuring the particles destroys the quantum state."

Coordinating Classical and Quantum Signals

To get around this obstacle, the team developed the "Q-Chip" (short for "Quantum-Classical Hybrid Internet by Photonics") to coordinate "classical" signals, made of regular streams of light, and quantum particles. "The classical signal travels just ahead of the quantum signal," says Yichi Zhang , a doctoral student in MSE and the paper's first author. "That allows us to measure the classical signal for routing, while leaving the quantum signal intact."

In essence, the new system works like a railway, pairing regular light locomotives with quantum cargo. "The classical 'header' acts like the train's engine, while the quantum information rides behind in sealed containers," says Zhang. "You can't open the containers without destroying what's inside, but the engine ensures the whole train gets where it needs to go."

Because the classical header can be measured, the entire system can follow the same "IP" or "Internet Protocol" that governs today's internet traffic. "By embedding quantum information in the familiar IP framework, we showed that a quantum internet could literally speak the same language as the classical one," says Zhang. "That compatibility is key to scaling using existing infrastructure."

Adapting Quantum Technology to the Real World

One of the greatest challenges to transmitting quantum particles on commercial infrastructure is the variability of real-world transmission lines. Unlike laboratory environments, which can maintain ideal conditions, commercial networks frequently encounter changes in temperature, thanks to weather, as well as vibrations from human activities like construction and transportation, not to mention seismic activity.

To counteract this, the researchers developed an error-correction method that takes advantage of the fact that interference to the classical header will affect the quantum signal in a similar fashion. "Because we can measure the classical signal without damaging the quantum one," says Feng, "we can infer what corrections need to be made to the quantum signal without ever measuring it, preserving the quantum state."

In testing, the system maintained transmission fidelities above 97%, showing that it could overcome the noise and instability that usually destroy quantum signals outside the lab. And because the chip is made of silicon and fabricated using established techniques, it could be mass produced, making the new approach easy to scale.

"Our network has just one server and one node, connecting two buildings, with about a kilometer of fiber-optic cable installed by Verizon between them," says Feng. "But all you need to do to expand the network is fabricate more chips and connect them to Philadelphia's existing fiber-optic cables."

The Future of the Quantum Internet

The main barrier to scaling quantum networks beyond a metro area is that quantum signals cannot yet be amplified without destroying their entanglement.

While some teams have shown that "quantum keys," special codes for ultra-secure communication, can travel long distances over ordinary fiber, those systems use weak coherent light to generate random numbers that cannot be copied, a technique that is highly effective for security applications but not sufficient to link actual quantum processors.

Overcoming this challenge will require new devices, but the Penn study provides an important early step: showing how a chip can run quantum signals over existing commercial fiber using internet-style packet routing, dynamic switching and on-chip error mitigation that work with the same protocols that manage today's networks.

"This feels like the early days of the classical internet in the 1990s, when universities first connected their networks," says Broberg. "That opened the door to transformations no one could have predicted. A quantum internet has the same potential."

This study was conducted at the University of Pennsylvania School of Engineering and Applied Science and was supported by the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation (GBMF12960 and DOI 10.37807), Office of Naval Research (N00014-23-1-2882), National Science Foundation (DMR-2323468), Olga and Alberico Pompa endowed professorship, and PSC-CUNY award (ENHC-54-93).

Additional co-authors include Alan Zhu, Gushi Li and Jonathan Smith of the University of Pennsylvania, and Li Ge of the City University of New York.

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