Physically unclonable function (PUF) is a widely used hardware-level identification method. SRAM PUFs are the most well-known PUF topology, but they typically suffer from low reproducibility due to non-deterministic behaviors and noise during power-up process. In this work, we propose two power-up control techniques that effectively improve reproducibility of the SRAM PUFs. The techniques reduce undesirable bit flipping during evaluation by controlling either evaluation region or power supply ramp-up speed. Measurement results from the 180 nm test chip confirm that native unstable bits (NUBs) are reduced by 54.87% and bit error rate (BER) decreases by 55.05% while reproducibility increases by 2.2×.
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