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2023-05-12
Power, Conor, Staszewski, Robert Bogdan, Blokhina, Elena.  2022.  Cryogenic Transistor Confinement Well Simulation through Material and Carrier Transport Decoupling. 2022 29th IEEE International Conference on Electronics, Circuits and Systems (ICECS). :1–2.
We propose a methodology for the simulation of electrostatic confinement wells in transistors at cryogenic temperatures. This is considered in the context of 22-nm fully depleted silicon-on-insulator transistors due to their potential for imple-menting quantum bits in scalable quantum computing systems. To overcome thermal fluctuations and improve decoherence times in most quantum bit implementations, they must be operated at cryogenic temperatures. We review the dominant sources of electric field at these low temperatures, including material interface work function differences and trapped interface charges. Intrinsic generation and dopant ionisation are shown to be negligible at cryogenic temperatures when using a mode of operation suitable for confinement. We propose studying cryogenic electrostatic confinement wells in transistors using a finite-element model simulation, and decoupling carrier transport generated fields.
2023-02-03
Triyanto, Aripin, Sunardi, Ariyawan, Nurtiyanto, Woro Agus, Koiru Ihksanudin, Moch, Mardiansyah.  2022.  Security System In The Safe With The Personal Identification Method Of Number Identification With Modulo Arthmatic Patterns. 2022 IEEE 8th International Conference on Computing, Engineering and Design (ICCED). :1–6.
The burglary of a safe in the city of Jombang, East Java, lost valuables belonging to the Cemerlang Multipurpose Trading Cooperative. Therefore, a security system tool was created in the safe that serves as a place to store valuables and important assets. Change the security system using the security system with a private unique method with modulo arithmetic pattern. The security system of the safe is designed in layers which are attached with the RFID tag by registering and then verifying it on the card. Entering the password on the card cannot be read or is not performed, then the system will refuse to open it. arduino mega type 256 components, RFID tag is attached to the RFID reader, only one validated passive tag can open access to the security system, namely number B9 20 E3 0F. Meanwhile, of the ten passwords entered, only three match the modulo arithmetic format and can open the security system, namely password numbers 22540, 51324 and 91032. The circuit system on the transistor in the solenoid driver circuit works after the safety system opens. The servo motor can rotate according to the input of the open 900 servo angle rotation program.
ISSN: 2767-7826
2022-07-14
Gonzalez-Zalba, M. Fernando.  2021.  Quantum computing with CMOS technology. 2021 Design, Automation & Test in Europe Conference & Exhibition (DATE). :761—761.
Quantum computing is poised to be the innovation driver of the next decade. Its information processing capabilities will radically accelerate drug discovery, improve online security, or even boost artificial intelligence [1]. Building a quantum computer promises to have a major positive impact in society, however building the hardware that will enable that paradigm change its one of the greatest technological challenges for humanity.
2022-06-09
Claude, Tuyisenge Jean, Viviane, Ishimwe, Paul, Iradukunda Jean, Didacienne, Mukanyiligira.  2021.  Development of Security Starting System for Vehicles Based on IoT. 2021 International Conference on Information Technology (ICIT). :505–510.
The transportation system is becoming tremendously important in today's human activities and the number of urban vehicles grows rapidly. The vehicle theft also has become a shared concern for all vehicle owners. However, the present anti-theft system which maybe high reliable, lack of proper mechanism for preventing theft before it happens. This work proposes the internet of things based smart vehicle security staring system; efficient security provided to the vehicle owners relies on securing car ignition system by using a developed android application running on smart phone connected to the designed system installed in vehicle. With this system it is non- viable to access the vehicle's functional system in case the ignition key has been stolen or lost. It gives the drivers the ability to stay connected with their vehicle. Whenever the ignition key is stolen or lost, it is impossible to start the vehicle as the ignition system is still locked on the vehicle start and only the authorized person will be able to start the vehicle at convenient time with the combination of ignition key and smart phone application. This study proposes to design the system that uses node MCU, Bluetooth low energy (BLE), transistors, power relays and android smartphone in system testing. In addition, it is cost effective and once installed in the vehicle there is no more cost of maintenance.
2022-05-19
Sankaran, Sriram, Mohan, Vamshi Sunku, Purushothaman., A.  2021.  Deep Learning Based Approach for Hardware Trojan Detection. 2021 IEEE International Symposium on Smart Electronic Systems (iSES). :177–182.
Hardware Trojans are modifications made by malicious insiders or third party providers during the design or fabrication phase of the IC (Integrated Circuits) design cycle in a covert manner. These cause catastrophic consequences ranging from manipulating the functionality of individual blocks to disabling the entire chip. Thus, a need for detecting trojans becomes necessary. In this work, we propose a deep learning based approach for detecting trojans in IC chips. In particular, we insert trojans at the circuit-level and generate data by measuring power during normal operation and under attack. Further, we develop deep learning models using Neural networks and Auto-encoders to analyze datasets for outlier detection by profiling the normal behavior and leveraging them to detect anomalies in power consumption. Our approach is generic and non-invasive in that it can be applied to any block without any modifications to the design. Evaluation of the proposed approach shows an accuracy ranging from 92.23% to 99.33% in detecting trojans.
2022-03-01
Huang, Shanshi, Peng, Xiaochen, Jiang, Hongwu, Luo, Yandong, Yu, Shimeng.  2021.  Exploiting Process Variations to Protect Machine Learning Inference Engine from Chip Cloning. 2021 IEEE International Symposium on Circuits and Systems (ISCAS). :1–5.
Machine learning inference engine is of great interest to smart edge computing. Compute-in-memory (CIM) architecture has shown significant improvements in throughput and energy efficiency for hardware acceleration. Emerging nonvolatile memory (eNVM) technologies offer great potentials for instant on and off by dynamic power gating. Inference engine is typically pre-trained by the cloud and then being deployed to the field. There is a new security concern on cloning of the weights stored on eNVM-based CIM chip. In this paper, we propose a countermeasure to the weight cloning attack by exploiting the process variations of the periphery circuitry. In particular, we use weight fine-tuning to compensate the analog-to-digital converter (ADC) offset for a specific chip instance while inducing significant accuracy drop for cloned chip instances. We evaluate our proposed scheme on a CIFAR-10 classification task using a VGG- 8 network. Our results show that with precisely chosen transistor size on the employed SAR-ADC, we could maintain 88% 90% accuracy for the fine-tuned chip while the same set of weights cloned on other chips will only have 20 40% accuracy on average. The weight fine-tune could be completed within one epoch of 250 iterations. On average only 0.02%, 0.025%, 0.142% of cells are updated for 2-bit, 4-bit, 8-bit weight precisions in each iteration.
2021-03-04
Riya, S. S., Lalu, V..  2020.  Stable cryptographic key generation using SRAM based Physical Unclonable Function. 2020 International Conference on Smart Electronics and Communication (ICOSEC). :653—657.
Physical unclonable functions(PUFs) are widely used as hardware root-of-trust to secure IoT devices, data and services. A PUF exploits inherent randomness introduced during manufacturing to give a unique digital fingerprint. Static Random-Access Memory (SRAM) based PUFs can be used as a mature technology for authentication. An SRAM with a number of SRAM cells gives an unrepeatable and random pattern of 0's and 1's during power on. As it is a unique pattern, it can be called as SRAM fingerprint and can be used as a PUF. The chance of producing more number of same values (either zero or one) is higher during power on. If a particular value present at almost all the cell during power on, it will lead to the dominance of either zero or one in the cryptographic key sequence. As the cryptographic key is generated by randomly taking address location of SRAM cells, (the subset of power on values of all the SRAM cells)the probability of occurring the same sequence most of the time is higher. In order to avoid that situation, SRAM should have to produce an equal number of zeros and ones during power on. SRAM PUF is implemented in Cadence Virtuoso tool. To generate equal zeros and ones during power on, variations can be done in the physical dimensions and to increase the stability body biasing can be effectively done.
Kostromitin, K. I., Dokuchaev, B. N., Kozlov, D. A..  2020.  Analysis of the Most Common Software and Hardware Vulnerabilities in Microprocessor Systems. 2020 International Russian Automation Conference (RusAutoCon). :1031—1036.

The relevance of data protection is related to the intensive informatization of various aspects of society and the need to prevent unauthorized access to them. World spending on ensuring information security (IS) for the current state: expenses in the field of IS today amount to \$81.7 billion. Expenditure forecast by 2020: about \$105 billion [1]. Information protection of military facilities is the most critical in the public sector, in the non-state - financial organizations is one of the leaders in spending on information protection. An example of the importance of IS research is the Trojan encoder WannaCry, which infected hundreds of thousands of computers around the world, attacks are recorded in more than 116 countries. The attack of the encoder of WannaCry (Wana Decryptor) happens through a vulnerability in service Server Message Block (protocol of network access to file systems) of Windows OS. Then, a rootkit (a set of malware) was installed on the infected system, using which the attackers launched an encryption program. Then each vulnerable computer could become infected with another infected device within one local network. Due to these attacks, about \$70,000 was lost (according to data from 18.05.2017) [2]. It is assumed in the presented work, that the software level of information protection is fundamentally insufficient to ensure the stable functioning of critical objects. This is due to the possible hardware implementation of undocumented instructions, discussed later. The complexity of computing systems and the degree of integration of their components are constantly growing. Therefore, monitoring the operation of the computer hardware is necessary to achieve the maximum degree of protection, in particular, data processing methods.

2020-11-16
Su, H., Halak, B., Zwolinski, M..  2019.  Two-Stage Architectures for Resilient Lightweight PUFs. 2019 IEEE 4th International Verification and Security Workshop (IVSW). :19–24.
The following topics are dealt with: Internet of Things; invasive software; security of data; program testing; reverse engineering; product codes; binary codes; decoding; maximum likelihood decoding; field programmable gate arrays.
2020-11-09
Rao, V. V., Savidis, I..  2019.  Mesh Based Obfuscation of Analog Circuit Properties. 2019 IEEE International Symposium on Circuits and Systems (ISCAS). :1–5.
In this paper, a technique to design analog circuits with enhanced security is described. The proposed key based obfuscation technique uses a mesh topology to obfuscate the physical dimensions and the threshold voltage of the transistor. To mitigate the additional overhead of implementing the obfuscated circuitry, a satisfiability modulo theory (SMT) based algorithm is proposed to auto-determine the sizes of the transistors selected for obfuscation such that only a limited set of key values produce the correct circuit functionality. The proposed algorithm and the obfuscation methodology is implemented on an LC tank voltage-controlled oscillator (VCO). The operating frequency of the VCO is masked with a 24-bit encryption key applied to a 2×6 mesh structure that obfuscates the dimensions of each varactor transistor. The probability of determining the correct key is 5.96×10-8 through brute force attack. The dimensions of the obfuscated transistors determined by the analog satisfiability (aSAT) algorithm result in at least a 15%, 3%, and 13% deviation in, respectively, the effective transistor dimensions, target frequency, and voltage amplitude when an incorrect key is applied to the VCO. In addition, only one key produces the desired frequency and properly sets the overall performance specifications of the VCO. The simulated results indicate that the proposed design methodology, which quickly and accurately determines the transistor sizes for obfuscation, produces the target specifications and provides protection for analog circuits against IP piracy and reverse engineering.
2020-04-24
Makhoul, Rawad, Maynard, Xavier, Perichon, Pierre, Frey, David, Jeannin, Pierre-Olivier, Lembeye, Yves.  2018.  A Novel Self Oscillating Class Phi2 Inverter Topology. 2018 2nd European Conference on Electrical Engineering and Computer Science (EECS). :7—10.

The class φ2 is a single transistor, fast transient inverter topology often associated with power conversion at very high frequency (VHF: 30MHz-300MHz). At VHF, gate drivers available on the market fail to provide the adequate transistor switching signal. Hence, there is a need for new power topologies that do no make use of gate drivers but are still suitable for power conversion at VHF. In This paper, we introduce a new class φ;2 topology that incorporates an oscillator, which takes the drain signal through a feedback circuit in order to force the transistor switching. A design methodology is provided and a 1MHz 20V input prototype is built in order to validate the topology behaviour.

2019-06-10
Su, H., Zwolinski, M., Halak, B..  2018.  A Machine Learning Attacks Resistant Two Stage Physical Unclonable Functions Design. 2018 IEEE 3rd International Verification and Security Workshop (IVSW). :52-55.

Physical Unclonable Functions (PUFs) have been designed for many security applications such as identification, authentication of devices and key generation, especially for lightweight electronics. Traditional approaches to enhancing security, such as hash functions, may be expensive and resource dependent. However, modelling attacks using machine learning (ML) show the vulnerability of most PUFs. In this paper, a combination of a 32-bit current mirror and 16-bit arbiter PUFs in 65nm CMOS technology is proposed to improve resilience against modelling attacks. Both PUFs are vulnerable to machine learning attacks and we reduce the output prediction rate from 99.2% and 98.8% individually, to 60%.

2018-08-23
Ziegler, A., Luisier, M..  2017.  Phonon confinement effects in diffusive quantum transport simulations with the effective mass approximation and k·p method. 2017 International Conference on Simulation of Semiconductor Processes and Devices (SISPAD). :25–28.

Despite the continuous shrinking of the transistor dimensions, advanced modeling tools going beyond the ballistic limit of transport are still critically needed to ensure accurate device investigations. For that purpose we present here a straight-forward approach to include phonon confinement effects into dissipative quantum transport calculations based on the effective mass approximation (EMA) and the k·p method. The idea is to scale the magnitude of the deformation potentials describing the electron-phonon coupling to obtain the same low-field mobility as with full-band simulations and confined phonons. This technique is validated by demonstrating that after adjusting the mobility value of n- and p-type silicon nanowire transistors, the resulting EMA and k·p I-V characteristics agree well with those derived from full-band studies.

2018-06-11
Armstrong, D., Nasri, B., Karri, R., Shahrjerdi, D..  2017.  Hybrid silicon CMOS-carbon nanotube physically unclonable functions. 2017 IEEE SOI-3D-Subthreshold Microelectronics Technology Unified Conference (S3S). :1–3.

Physically unclonable functions (PUFs) are used to uniquely identify electronic devices. Here, we introduce a hybrid silicon CMOS-nanotube PUF circuit that uses the variations of nanotube transistors to generate a random response. An analog silicon circuit subsequently converts the nanotube response to zero or one bits. We fabricate an array of nanotube transistors to study and model their device variability. The behavior of the hybrid CMOS-nanotube PUF is then simulated. The parameters of the analog circuit are tuned to achieve the desired normalized Hamming inter-distance of 0.5. The co-design of the nanotube array and the silicon CMOS is an attractive feature for increasing the immunity of the hybrid PUF against an unauthorized duplication. The heterogeneous integration of nanotubes with silicon CMOS offers a new strategy for realizing security tokens that are strong, low-cost, and reliable.

2017-03-08
Reis, R..  2015.  Trends on EDA for low power. 2015 IEEE MTT-S International Conference on Numerical Electromagnetic and Multiphysics Modeling and Optimization (NEMO). :1–4.

One of the main issues in the design of modern integrated circuits is power reduction. Mainly in digital circuits, the power consumption was defined by the dynamic power consumption, during decades. But in the new NanoCMOs technologies, the static power due to the leakage current is becoming the main issue in power consumption. As the leakage power is related to the amount of components, it is becoming mandatory to reduce the amount of transistors in any type of design, to reduce power consumption. So, it is important to obtain new EDA algorithms and tools to optimize the amount of components (transistors). It is also needed tools for the layout design automation that are able to design any network of components that is provided by an optimization tool that is able to reduce the size of the network of components. It is presented an example of a layout design automation tool that can do the layout of any network of transistors using transistors of any size. Another issue for power optimization is the use of tools and algorithms for gate sizing. The designer can manage the sizing of transistors to reduce power consumption, without compromising the clock frequency. There are two types of gate sizing, discrete gate sizing and continuous gate sizing. The discrete gate sizing tools are used when it is being used a cell library that has only few available sizes for each cell. The continuous gate sizing considers that the EDA tool can define any transistor sizing. In this case, the designer needs to have a layout design tool able to do the layout of transistors with any size. It will be presented the winner tools of the ISPD Contest 2012 and 2013. Also, it will be discussed the inclusion of our gate sizing algorithms in an industrial flow used to design state-of-the-art microprocessors. Another type of EDA tool that is becoming more and more useful is the visualization tools that provide an animated visual output of the running of EDA tools. This kind of tools is very usef- l to show to the tool developers how the tool is running. So, the EDA developers can use this information to improve the algorithms used in an EDA Tool.

2015-05-06
Yoshimizu, N..  2014.  Hardware trojan detection by symmetry breaking in path delays. Hardware-Oriented Security and Trust (HOST), 2014 IEEE International Symposium on. :107-111.

This paper discusses the detection of hardware Trojans (HTs) by their breaking of symmetries within integrated circuits (ICs), as measured by path delays. Typically, path delay or side channel methods rely on comparisons to a golden, or trusted, sample. However, golden standards are affected by inter-and intra-die variations which limit the confidence in such comparisons. Symmetry is a way to detect modifications to an IC with increased confidence by confirming subcircuit consistencies within as it was originally designed. The difference in delays from a given path to a set of symmetric paths will be the same unless an inserted HT breaks symmetry. Symmetry can naturally exist in ICs or be artificially added. We describe methods to find and measure path delays against symmetric paths, as well as the advantages and disadvantages of this method. We discuss results of examples from benchmark circuits demonstrating the detection of hardware Trojans.