Yasuhiro IkezoeSong-Ju KimDonghyun KirnSeung‐Beck LeeMasahiko Hara
We have fabricated a square lattice array of sub-micrometer fluorescent (red and green) polystyrene particles. The particles were each embedded into small pits fabricated on a silicon substrate by electron beam lithography, through the drying process of an aqueous suspension containing equal amounts of the two species. We indexed 0 and 1 for each red and green particle, respectively, and then obtained a one-dimensional bit sequence by the successive reading of the indices in a predetermined manner. We evaluated the randomness of the bit sequence by using the improved FIPS 140-2 statistical test suite. Consequently, we found that the bit sequences do not have any non-randomness. The particle array was obtained by a very simple process, i.e., the drying of a suspension, but the particle distribution pattern was definitely unpredictable and irreproducible, and the number of possible patterns was tremendously large. The signal--i.e., the color of the particle--does not deteriorate within a practical timescale under various conditions, such as in an electric field, in a magnetic field, in air or water, on a solid matrix, and so on, which means that a small tip with the particle pattern can be installed in miscellaneous object, including electronic products, plastic credit cards, currency bills, and so on. Therefore, this particle array is applicable to a nanoscale identification tag or a one-time pad encryption tip.
Patrick HuberThomas M. BlättlerMarcus TextorW. LeitenbergerU. PietschThomas Geue
Stewart A. MalloryAngelo Cacciuto
Ayoub LaghrissiPrince GuptaHorst‐Günter RubahnJacek Fiutowski
Martín MayerMoritz TebbeChristian KuttnerMax J. SchnepfTobias A. F. KönigAndreas Fery
N. A. SapoletovaН. А. МартыноваKirill S. NapolskiiА. А. ЕлисеевA. V. LukashinI. V. KolesnikDmitrii I. PetukhovSergey E. KushnirA. V. VassilievaS. V. GrigorievN. A. GrigoryevaА. А. МистоновDmytro V. ByelovYu. D. Tret’yakov