| Literature DB >> 29360790 |
Yuan Cao1, Xiaojin Zhao2, Wenbin Ye3, Qingbang Han4, Xiaofang Pan5.
Abstract
Authentication is a crucial security service for the wireless sensor networks (WSNs) in versatile domains. The deployment of WSN devices in the untrusted open environment and the resource-constrained nature make the on-chip authentication an open challenge. The strong physical unclonable function (PUF) came in handy as light-weight authentication security primitive. In this paper, we present the first ring oscillator (RO) based strong physical unclonable function (PUF) with high resilience to both the electromagnetic (EM) side-channel attack and the support vector machine (SVM) modelling attack. By employing an RO based PUF architecture with the current starved inverter as the delay cell, the oscillation power is significantly reduced to minimize the emitted EM signal, leading to greatly enhanced immunity to the EM side-channel analysis attack. In addition, featuring superior reconfigurability due to the conspicuously simplified circuitries, the proposed implementation is capable of withstanding the SVM modelling attack by generating and comparing a large number of RO frequency pairs. The reported experimental results validate the prototype of a 9-stage RO PUF fabricated using standard 65 nm complementary-metal-oxide-semiconductor (CMOS) process. Operating at the supply voltage of 1.2 V and the frequency of 100 KHz, the fabricated RO PUF occupies a compact silicon area of 250 μ m 2 and consumes a power as low as 5.16 μ W per challenge-response pair (CRP). Furthermore, the uniqueness and the worst-case reliability are measured to be 50.17% and 98.30% for the working temperature range of -40∼120 ∘ C and the supply voltage variation of ±2%, respectively. Thus, the proposed PUF is applicable for the low power, low cost and secure WSN communications.Entities:
Keywords: electromagnetic side-channel attack; ring oscillator; strong physical unclonable function; support vector machine modelling attack; wireless sensor network
Year: 2018 PMID: 29360790 PMCID: PMC5856110 DOI: 10.3390/s18020322
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576
Figure 1Architecture of the proposed ring oscillator (RO) PUF.
Figure 2Schematics of (a) regular inverter and (b) current starved inverter.
Figure 3Schematic of the MUX in the proposed physical unclonable function (PUF).
Figure 4The microphotograph of the proposed RO PUF chip.
Figure 5The probe station for testing the sample chips.
Figure 6The distribution of RO’s oscillation frequency for one sample chip.
Figure 7The measured inter-die HD distribution for the proposed RO PUF.
Figure 8(a) The measured average reliability of the proposed RO PUF versus the temperature variations; (b) the measured average reliability of the proposed RO PUF versus the voltage variations.
Figure 9The measured average power consumption per challenge-response pair (CRP) of the proposed PUF at different ROs frequencies.
Figure 10The prediction accuracy by support vector machine (SVM) for the proposed PUF with and without reconfigurability.
Figure 11(a) The measured EM radiation for the regular RO; (b) the measured EM radiation for the proposed RO.