Optical physical unclonable function
(PUF) is one of the most promising
hardware security solutions, which has been proven to be resistant
to machine learning attacks. However, the disordered structures of
the traditional optical PUFs are usually deterministic once they are
manufactured and therefore exhibit fixed challenge–response
behaviors. Herein, a reconfigurable PUF (R-PUF) is proposed and demonstrated
by using the reversible phase transition behavior of VO2 nanocrystals combined with TiO2 disordered nanoparticles.
Both the simulation and experiment results show that the near-infrared
laser speckle pattern of the R-PUF can be almost completely altered
after the phase transition of VO2 nanocrystals, resulting
in a reconfigurable and reproducible optical response. The similarity
of the response speckles shows an obvious hysteresis loop during the
rise and drop of temperature, providing a simple way to regulate and
control the response behaviors of the R-PUF. More importantly, the
hysteretic characteristic provides a new dimension to describe the
challenge–response behavior of the R-PUF besides the laser
speckle, providing an effective way to improve the security and encoding
capacity of the optical PUFs. The proposed R-PUF can be employed as
a promising security primitive for high robustness and high-security
authentication and encryption.
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