Author:
Jeong Jae-Seung,Lee Gyo Sub,Park Tae-Eon,Lee Ki-Young,Ju Hyunsu
Abstract
AbstractHuman fingerprints are randomly created during fetal activity in the womb, resulting in unique and physically irreproducible fingerprint patterns that are applicable as a biological cryptographic primitive. Similarly, stochastically knitted single-walled carbon nanotube (SWNT) network surfaces exhibit inherently random and unique electrical characteristics that can be exploited as a physical unclonable function (PUF) in the authentication. In this study, filamentous M13 bacteriophages are used as a biological gluing template to create a random SWNT network surface with mechanical flexibility, with electrical properties determined by random variation during fabrication. The resistance profile between two adjacent electrodes was mapped for these M13-mediated SWNT network surfaces, with the results demonstrating a unique resistance profile for each M13-SWNT device, similar to that of human fingerprints. Randomness and uniqueness measures were evaluated as respectively 50.5% and 50% using generated challenge–response pairs. Min-entropy for unpredictability evaluation of the M13-SWNT based PUFs resulted in 0.98. Our results showed that M13-SWNT random network exhibits cryptographic characteristics when used in a bio-inspired PUF device.
Funder
the Korean National Police Agency
the Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism (MCST) and Korea Creative Content Agency
Korea Institute of Science and Technology
the National Research Foundation of Korea
the Ministry of Science and ICT
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Cited by
5 articles.
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