Revisiting silk: a lens-free optical physical unclonable function
- Abstract
- For modern security, devices, individuals, and communications require unprecedentedly unique identifiers and cryptographic keys. One emerging method for guaranteeing digital security is to take advantage of a physical unclonable function. Surprisingly, native silk, which has been commonly utilized in everyday life as textiles, can be applied as a unique tag material, thereby removing the necessary apparatus for optical physical unclonable functions, such as an objective lens or a coherent light source. Randomly distributed fibers in silk generate spatially chaotic diffractions, forming self-focused spots on the millimeter scale. The silk-based physical unclonable function has a self-focusing, low-cost, and eco-friendly feature without relying on pre-/post-process for security tag creation. Using these properties, we implement a lens-free, optical, and portable physical unclonable function with silk identification cards and study its characteristics and reliability in a systemic manner. We further demonstrate the feasibility of the physical unclonable functions in two modes: authentication and data encryption. Although conventional optical physical unclonable functions (PUFs) are attractive for security applications, existing optical PUFs have inherent complexity. Here, the authors report a low-cost, lens-free and compact optical PUF that uses silk microfiber-based stochastic diffraction.
- Author(s)
- Kim, Min Seok; Lee, Gil Ju; Leem, Jung Woo; Choi, Seungho; Kim, Young L.; Song, Young Min
- Issued Date
- 2022-01
- Type
- Article
- DOI
- 10.1038/s41467-021-27278-5
- URI
- https://scholar.gist.ac.kr/handle/local/11066
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