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Tiny, battery-free ID chip can authenticate nearly any product to help combat losses to counterfeiting.

Posted on February 23, 2020

MIT researchers have invented a cryptographic ID tag that’s small enough to fit on virtually any product and verify its authenticity. It will be very useful to combat supply chain counterfeiting, which can cost companies billions of dollars annually.

A 2018 report from the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development estimates about $2 trillion worth of counterfeit goods will be sold worldwide in 2020. That’s bad news for consumers and companies that order parts from different sources worldwide to build products.

Counterfeiters tend to use complex routes that include many checkpoints, making it challenging to verifying their origins and authenticity. Consequently, companies can end up with imitation parts. Wireless ID tags are becoming increasingly popular for authenticating assets as they change hands at each checkpoint. But these tags come with various size, cost, energy, and security tradeoffs that limit their potential.

Popular radio-frequency identification (RFID) tags, for instance, are too large to fit on tiny objects such as medical and industrial components, automotive parts, or silicon chips. RFID tags also contain no tough security measures. Some tags are built with encryption schemes to protect against cloning and ward off hackers, but they’re large and power hungry. Shrinking the tags means giving up both the antenna package and the ability to run strong encryption.

Even though it’s the size of a sesame seed, the ID tag (zoomed in, right) can send wireless communications at reader distances competitive with the much larger RFID tags (left) and can run cryptographic algorithms to help secure nearly any product in the supply chain.
Image: courtesy of the researchers

In a paper presented at the IEEE International Solid-State Circuits Conference (ISSCC), the researchers describe an ID chip that navigates all those tradeoffs. It’s millimeter-sized and runs on relatively low levels of power supplied by photovoltaic diodes. It also transmits data at far ranges, using a power-free “backscatter” technique that operates at a frequency hundreds of times higher than RFIDs. Algorithm optimization techniques also enable the chip to run a popular cryptography scheme that guarantees secure communications using extremely low energy.

News Source: MIT

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