In this article, a novel subthreshold voltage reference (VR)-based physical unclonable function (PUF) is presented. With two native nMOS transistors stacked on top for providing bias current and two bottom… Click to show full abstract
In this article, a novel subthreshold voltage reference (VR)-based physical unclonable function (PUF) is presented. With two native nMOS transistors stacked on top for providing bias current and two bottom low threshold voltage (LVT) nMOS transistors forming the self-cascode MOSFETs structure, a 4T all-MOSFET VR is proposed, which features low power consumption and high stability under largely varied VT conditions for the wide range of Internet of Things (IoT) applications. By integrating a pair of the proposed VRs and a digital voltage comparator in each PUF cell, the mismatched output voltages of the VR pair can be locally compared and digitized immediately with the system’s power on, leading to ultrashort signal path and maximized immunity to the influence of temporal noise. Fabricated using standard 0.18- $\mu \text{m}$ CMOS process, the proposed PUF design is validated based on extensive measurement results of 20 PUF chips. By passing the widely exploited bias test, National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) test and autocorrelation function (ACF) test, the proposed PUF’s excellent randomness is well-verified. In addition, the uniqueness is measured to be 49.92%, and the bit error rate (BER) sensitivities in terms of BER per 10 °C and BER per 0.1 V are averaged and reported to be 0.39% and 0.26%, for the temperature range of −40 °C–120 °C and supply voltage range of 1.2–1.8 V, respectively. Moreover, by operating the proposed implementation at a throughput of 50 Mb/s, the measured overall energy consumption is reported to be as low as 163 fJ/bit.
               
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