DocumentCode :
63962
Title :
Nano Meets Security: Exploring Nanoelectronic Devices for Security Applications
Author :
Rajendran, Jeyavijayan ; Karri, Ramesh ; Wendt, James B. ; Potkonjak, Miodrag ; McDonald, Nathan ; Rose, Garrett S. ; Wysocki, Bryant
Author_Institution :
New York Univ., New York, NY, USA
Volume :
103
Issue :
5
fYear :
2015
fDate :
May-15
Firstpage :
829
Lastpage :
849
Abstract :
Information security has emerged as an important system and application metric. Classical security solutions use algorithmic mechanisms that address a small subset of emerging security requirements, often at high-energy and performance overhead. Further, emerging side-channel and physical attacks can compromise classical security solutions. Hardware security solutions overcome many of these limitations with less energy and performance overhead. Nanoelectronics-based hardware security preserves these advantages while enabling conceptually new security primitives and applications. This tutorial paper shows how one can develop hardware security primitives by exploiting the unique characteristics such as complex device and system models, bidirectional operation, and nonvolatility of emerging nanoelectronic devices. This paper then explains the security capabilities of several emerging nanoelectronic devices: memristors, resistive random-access memory, contact-resistive random-access memory, phase change memories, spin torque-transfer random-access memory, orthogonal spin transfer random access memory, graphene, carbon nanotubes, silicon nanowire field-effect transistors, and nanoelectronic mechanical switches. Further, the paper describes hardware security primitives for authentication, key generation, data encryption, device identification, digital forensics, tamper detection, and thwarting reverse engineering. Finally, the paper summarizes the outstanding challenges in using emerging nanoelectronic devices for security.
Keywords :
carbon nanotubes; cryptography; digital forensics; elemental semiconductors; field effect transistors; graphene devices; microswitches; nanoelectronics; nanowires; phase change memories; resistive RAM; silicon; C; Si; algorithmic mechanisms; authentication; bidirectional operation; carbon nanotubes; classical security solutions; complex device; contact resistive random access memory; data encryption; device identification; digital forensics; graphene; hardware security primitives; information security; key generation; memristors; nanoelectronic devices; nanoelectronic mechanical switches; orthogonal spin transfer random access memory; phase change memories; physical attacks; security requirements; side channel; silicon nanowire field effect transistors; spin torque-transfer random-access memory; tamper detection; thwarting reverse engineering; CMOS integrated circuits; Digital forensics; Memristors; Nanoelectronics; Nanoscale devices; Network security; Phase change materials; Random access memory; Resistance; Emerging technologies; PCMs; hardware security; memristors; physical unclonable functions;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Proceedings of the IEEE
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0018-9219
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/JPROC.2014.2387353
Filename :
7106562
Link To Document :
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