A Secret Key Generation Scheme for Internet of Things using Ternary-States ReRAM-based Physical Unclonable Functions
Ashwija Reddy Korenda, Fatemeh Afghah, Bertrand Cambou

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel secret key generation scheme for IoT devices using ternary-state ReRAM-based PUFs, employing a fuzzy extractor with BCH-Polar codes to improve reliability and security.
Contribution
It proposes a new fuzzy extractor design for ternary ReRAM PUFs that reduces mismatch probability and helper data, enhancing IoT device authentication.
Findings
Lower probability of key mismatch demonstrated experimentally
Fewer helper data bits needed compared to previous methods
ReRAM-based PUFs are less vulnerable to side channel attacks
Abstract
Some of the main challenges towards utilizing conventional cryptographic techniques in Internet of Things (IoT) include the need for generating secret keys for such a large-scale network, distributing the generated keys to all the devices, key storage as well as the vulnerability to security attacks when an adversary gets physical access to the devices. In this paper, a novel secret key generation method is proposed for IoTs that utilize the intrinsic randomness embedded in the devices' memories introduced in the manufacturing process. A fuzzy extractor structure using serially concatenated BCH-Polar codes is proposed to generate reproducible keys from a ReRAM-based \emph{ternary-state} Physical Unclonable Functions (PUFs) for device authentication and secret key generation. The ReRAM based PUFs are the most practical choice for authentication and key generation in IoT, as they operate…
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