Edible unclonable functions.

Nat Commun

Weldon School of Biomedical Engineering, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana, 47907, USA.

Published: January 2020

Counterfeit medicines are a fundamental security problem. Counterfeiting medication poses a tremendous threat to patient safety, public health, and the economy in developed and less developed countries. Current solutions are often vulnerable due to the limited security levels. We propose that the highest protection against counterfeit medicines would be a combination of a physically unclonable function (PUF) with on-dose authentication. A PUF can provide a digital fingerprint with multiple pairs of input challenges and output responses. On-dose authentication can verify every individual pill without removing the identification tag. Here, we report on-dose PUFs that can be directly attached onto the surface of medicines, be swallowed, and digested. Fluorescent proteins and silk proteins serve as edible photonic biomaterials and the photoluminescent properties provide parametric support of challenge-response pairs. Such edible cryptographic primitives can play an important role in pharmaceutical anti-counterfeiting and other security applications requiring immediate destruction or vanishing features.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6965141PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41467-019-14066-5DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

counterfeit medicines
8
on-dose authentication
8
edible unclonable
4
unclonable functions
4
functions counterfeit
4
medicines fundamental
4
fundamental security
4
security problem
4
problem counterfeiting
4
counterfeiting medication
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!