Visible to the public Biblio

Filters: Author is Chen, Cheng  [Clear All Filters]
2023-03-03
Yang, Gangqiang, Shi, Zhengyuan, Chen, Cheng, Xiong, Hailiang, Hu, Honggang, Wan, Zhiguo, Gai, Keke, Qiu, Meikang.  2022.  Work-in-Progress: Towards a Smaller than Grain Stream Cipher: Optimized FPGA Implementations of Fruit-80. 2022 International Conference on Compilers, Architecture, and Synthesis for Embedded Systems (CASES). :19–20.
Fruit-80, an ultra-lightweight stream cipher with 80-bit secret key, is oriented toward resource constrained devices in the Internet of Things. In this paper, we propose area and speed optimization architectures of Fruit-80 on FPGAs. The area optimization architecture reuses NFSR&LFSR feedback functions and achieves the most suitable ratio of look-up-tables and flip-flops. The speed optimization architecture adopts a hybrid approach for parallelization and reduces the latency of long data paths by pre-generating primary feedback and inserting flip-flops. In conclusion, the optimal throughput-to-area ratio of the speed optimization architecture is better than that of Grain v1. The area optimization architecture occupies only 35 slices on Xilinx Spartan-3 FPGA, smaller than that of Grain and other common stream ciphers. To the best of our knowledge, this result sets a new record of the minimum area in lightweight cipher implementations on FPGA.
2017-05-17
Chen, Cheng, Zhang, Fengchao, Barras, Jamie, Althoefer, Kaspar, Bhunia, Swarup, Mandal, Soumyajit.  2016.  Authentication of Medicines Using Nuclear Quadrupole Resonance Spectroscopy. IEEE/ACM Trans. Comput. Biol. Bioinformatics. 13:417–430.

The production and sale of counterfeit and substandard pharmaceutical products, such as essential medicines, is an important global public health problem. We describe a chemometric passport-based approach to improve the security of the pharmaceutical supply chain. Our method is based on applying nuclear quadrupole resonance (NQR) spectroscopy to authenticate the contents of medicine packets. NQR is a non-invasive, non-destructive, and quantitative radio frequency (RF) spectroscopic technique. It is sensitive to subtle features of the solid-state chemical environment and thus generates unique chemical fingerprints that are intrinsically difficult to replicate. We describe several advanced NQR techniques, including two-dimensional measurements, polarization enhancement, and spin density imaging, that further improve the security of our authentication approach. We also present experimental results that confirm the specificity and sensitivity of NQR and its ability to detect counterfeit medicines.