In order to make the quantum key agreement process immune to participant attacks, it is necessary to introduce the authentication in the communication process. A quantum key agreement protocol with identity authentication that exploit the measurement correlation of six-particle entangled states is proposed. In contrast to some recently proposed quantum key agreement protocols with authentication, this protocol requires neither a semi-trusted third party nor additional private keys in the authentication process. The entire process of authentication and key agreement can be achieved using only n six-particle entangled states, which saves communication costs and reduces the complexity of the authentication process. Finally, security analysis shows that this scheme is resistant to some important attacks.
Multi-particle entanglement is an important physical resource in quantum information processing, and the larger the number of particles in the entangled states, the more quantum superiority it can show in quantum communication and quantum computing. This paper proposes two quantum key agreement protocols using Ω states and six-particle entangled states. Both protocols ensure that two participants can fairly establish a final key through the measurement correlation for multi-particle entangled states. Since the protocols only use Bell measurements and Z-basis measurements, they are more easily achieved using current technology. From the perspective of security analysis, the protocols can resist participant attacks and external attacks. Finally, compared with some exising quantum key agreement protocols, our protocols can achieve higher qubit efficiency.
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