Title :
RESP: A robust Physical Unclonable Function retrofitted into embedded SRAM array
Author :
Yu Zheng ; Hashemian, Maryam S. ; Bhunia, Swarup
Author_Institution :
Dept. of EECS, Case Western Reserve Univ., Cleveland, OH, USA
fDate :
May 29 2013-June 7 2013
Abstract :
Physical Unclonable Functions (PUFs) have emerged as an attractive primitive to address diverse hardware security issues in Integrated Circuits (ICs). A majority of existing PUFs rely on a dedicated circuit structure for generating chip-specific signatures, which often imposes concerns due to area/power overhead and extra design efforts. Furthermore, existing PUF-based signature generation cannot be employed to authenticate chips already in the market. In this paper, we propose RESP, a novel PUF structure realized in embedded SRAM array, a prevalent component in processors and system-on-chips (SOCs), with virtually no design modification. RESP leverages on voltage-depend memory access failures (during write) to produce large volume of high-quality challenge-response pairs. Since many modern ICs integrate SRAM array of varying size with isolated power grid, RESP can be easily retrofitted into these chips. Circuit-level simulation of 1000 chips using realistic process variation model shows high uniqueness of 49.2% average inter-die Hamming distance and good reproducibility of 2.88% intra-die Hamming distance under temperature <; 85°C. The device aging effect, e.g. bias temperature instability (BTI), results in only 4.95% estimated unstable bits for ten-year usage.
Keywords :
SRAM chips; maintenance engineering; microprocessor chips; system-on-chip; RESP; circuit-level simulation; embedded SRAM array; hardware security; processors; retrofitting; robust physical unclonable function; system-on-chips; Arrays; Robustness; SRAM cells; System-on-chip; Voltage control; BTI; Hardware security; PUF; SRAM; Signature;
Conference_Titel :
Design Automation Conference (DAC), 2013 50th ACM/EDAC/IEEE
Conference_Location :
Austin, TX