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Imperfect quantum materials for applications in information security

Research output: Contribution to conference - Without ISBN/ISSN Speech

Published

Standard

Imperfect quantum materials for applications in information security. / Young, Robert James.
2018. 64 19TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON PHYSICS OF LIGHT-MATTER COUPLING IN NANOSTRUCTURES, Chengdu, China.

Research output: Contribution to conference - Without ISBN/ISSN Speech

Harvard

Young, RJ 2018, 'Imperfect quantum materials for applications in information security', 19TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON PHYSICS OF LIGHT-MATTER COUPLING IN NANOSTRUCTURES, Chengdu, China, 15/05/18 - 19/05/18 pp. 64.

APA

Young, R. J. (2018). Imperfect quantum materials for applications in information security. 64. 19TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON PHYSICS OF LIGHT-MATTER COUPLING IN NANOSTRUCTURES, Chengdu, China.

Vancouver

Young RJ. Imperfect quantum materials for applications in information security. 2018. 19TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON PHYSICS OF LIGHT-MATTER COUPLING IN NANOSTRUCTURES, Chengdu, China.

Author

Young, Robert James. / Imperfect quantum materials for applications in information security. 19TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON PHYSICS OF LIGHT-MATTER COUPLING IN NANOSTRUCTURES, Chengdu, China.1 p.

Bibtex

@conference{ac0e329fb5124577ae8dd66aaac38ed7,
title = "Imperfect quantum materials for applications in information security",
abstract = "The ability to uniquely identify an object or device is important for authentication. Imperfections,locked into structures during fabrication, can be used to provide a fingerprint that is challenging to reproduce. In this talk, I will present a simple optical technique to read unique information from nanometer-scale defects in quantum materials. Imperfections created during crystal growth or fabrication lead to spatial variations in the bandgap of 2D materials that can be characterized through photoluminescence measurements. I will show a simple setup (illustrated in Fig1) involving an angle-adjustable transmission filter, simple optics and a CCD camera can capture spatially-dependent photoluminescence to produce complex maps of unique information from 2D monolayers. Atomic force microscopy is used to verify the origin of the optical signature measured, demonstrating that it results from nanometer-scale imperfections.This solution to optical identification with 2D materials could be employed as a robust security measure to prevent counterfeiting.",
keywords = "quantum security, Quantum physics, Quantum technology, PUF, QID",
author = "Young, {Robert James}",
year = "2018",
month = may,
day = "17",
language = "English",
pages = "64",
note = "19TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON PHYSICS OF LIGHT-MATTER COUPLING IN NANOSTRUCTURES, PLMCN ; Conference date: 15-05-2018 Through 19-05-2018",
url = "https://events.mifp.eu/PLMCN-2018/",

}

RIS

TY - CONF

T1 - Imperfect quantum materials for applications in information security

AU - Young, Robert James

N1 - Conference code: 19

PY - 2018/5/17

Y1 - 2018/5/17

N2 - The ability to uniquely identify an object or device is important for authentication. Imperfections,locked into structures during fabrication, can be used to provide a fingerprint that is challenging to reproduce. In this talk, I will present a simple optical technique to read unique information from nanometer-scale defects in quantum materials. Imperfections created during crystal growth or fabrication lead to spatial variations in the bandgap of 2D materials that can be characterized through photoluminescence measurements. I will show a simple setup (illustrated in Fig1) involving an angle-adjustable transmission filter, simple optics and a CCD camera can capture spatially-dependent photoluminescence to produce complex maps of unique information from 2D monolayers. Atomic force microscopy is used to verify the origin of the optical signature measured, demonstrating that it results from nanometer-scale imperfections.This solution to optical identification with 2D materials could be employed as a robust security measure to prevent counterfeiting.

AB - The ability to uniquely identify an object or device is important for authentication. Imperfections,locked into structures during fabrication, can be used to provide a fingerprint that is challenging to reproduce. In this talk, I will present a simple optical technique to read unique information from nanometer-scale defects in quantum materials. Imperfections created during crystal growth or fabrication lead to spatial variations in the bandgap of 2D materials that can be characterized through photoluminescence measurements. I will show a simple setup (illustrated in Fig1) involving an angle-adjustable transmission filter, simple optics and a CCD camera can capture spatially-dependent photoluminescence to produce complex maps of unique information from 2D monolayers. Atomic force microscopy is used to verify the origin of the optical signature measured, demonstrating that it results from nanometer-scale imperfections.This solution to optical identification with 2D materials could be employed as a robust security measure to prevent counterfeiting.

KW - quantum security

KW - Quantum physics

KW - Quantum technology

KW - PUF

KW - QID

M3 - Speech

SP - 64

T2 - 19TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON PHYSICS OF LIGHT-MATTER COUPLING IN NANOSTRUCTURES

Y2 - 15 May 2018 through 19 May 2018

ER -