JOURNAL ARTICLE

Physically Unclonable Cryptographic Primitives by Chemical Vapor Deposition of Layered MoS2

Abdullah AlharbiDarren ArmstrongSomayah AlharbiDavood Shahrjerdi

Year: 2017 Journal:   ACS Nano Vol: 11 (12)Pages: 12772-12779   Publisher: American Chemical Society

Abstract

Physically unclonable cryptographic primitives are promising for securing the rapidly growing number of electronic devices. Here, we introduce physically unclonable primitives from layered molybdenum disulfide (MoS2) by leveraging the natural randomness of their island growth during chemical vapor deposition (CVD). We synthesize a MoS2 monolayer film covered with speckles of multilayer islands, where the growth process is engineered for an optimal speckle density. Using the Clark-Evans test, we confirm that the distribution of islands on the film exhibits complete spatial randomness, hence indicating the growth of multilayer speckles is a spatial Poisson process. Such a property is highly desirable for constructing unpredictable cryptographic primitives. The security primitive is an array of 2048 pixels fabricated from this film. The complex structure of the pixels makes the physical duplication of the array impossible (i.e., physically unclonable). A unique optical response is generated by applying an optical stimulus to the structure. The basis for this unique response is the dependence of the photoemission on the number of MoS2 layers, which by design is random throughout the film. Using a threshold value for the photoemission, we convert the optical response into binary cryptographic keys. We show that the proper selection of this threshold is crucial for maximizing combination randomness and that the optimal value of the threshold is linked directly to the growth process. This study reveals an opportunity for generating robust and versatile security primitives from layered transition metal dichalcogenides.

Keywords:
Chemical vapor deposition Materials science Cryptography Nanotechnology Cryptographic primitive Deposition (geology) Computer science Cryptographic protocol Computer security

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Citation History

Topics

Physical Unclonable Functions (PUFs) and Hardware Security
Physical Sciences →  Computer Science →  Hardware and Architecture
Advanced Memory and Neural Computing
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Electrical and Electronic Engineering
Adversarial Robustness in Machine Learning
Physical Sciences →  Computer Science →  Artificial Intelligence
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