TAMPER-PROOF PHYSICAL UNCLONABLE FUNCTION SEALS FOR AUTHENTICATION OF BOTTLES
20200304324 ยท 2020-09-24
Inventors
- Scott Richard Castle (Lexington, KY, US)
- Gary Allen Denton (Lexington, KY, US)
- James Paul Drummond (Georgetown, KY, US)
- ANDREW CHRISTOPHER GARDNER (LEXINGTON, KY, US)
- Keith Bryan Hardin (Lexington, KY)
- Kelly Ann Killeen (Lexington, KY)
- ROBERT HENRY MUYSKENS (LEXINGTON, KY, US)
- Brant Dennis Nystrom (Lexington, KY)
- Gary Scott Overall (Lexington, KY, US)
Cpc classification
G09C1/00
PHYSICS
E05B17/22
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
B65D41/34
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
G07C9/00722
PHYSICS
B65D2313/10
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
G09C5/00
PHYSICS
B65D2401/60
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
H04L9/32
ELECTRICITY
G06K7/14
PHYSICS
Abstract
Wine and liquor bottles have a shrink-wrap seal, or other type, that is applied to the cap/cork end of the bottle. This seal material can be loaded with randomly magnetized particles, such as flakes of an alloy of neodymium, iron, and boron (NdFeB). The randomly magnetized particles provide a unique unclonable magnetic fingerprint to the bottle. The magnetic field may be recorded for one or more circumferential bands around the surface of the bottle's neck and used as a magnetic fingerprint to authenticate the bottle. Authentication can be performed by inserting the bottle in an appropriate fixture, which measures the magnetic fingerprint.
Claims
1. A tamper proof label or seal resulting in a multifactor authentication comprising: a label that integrates a magnetic physically unclonable function (PUF) material in a particle form that creates a magnetic field, or magnetic fingerprint, that can be interrogated by a sensor device, wherein the PUF material is distributed and dense enough to make it impractical to copy; the PUF material configured such that if it is removed from the object parts of the label is separated leaving some PUF material on the object and other on the label; multiple layers in the label; and a substrate that is a durable portion of the label, wherein the material may be vinyl, PET, polyester, acrylic, paper or other rigid or flexible material.
2. The tamper proof label or seal of claim 1, wherein the magnetic field may be recorded for one or more circumferential bands around the surface of the bottle's neck and used as a magnetic fingerprint to authenticate the bottle.
3. The tamper proof label or seal of claim 1, wherein the particles contain an alloy of neodymium, iron, and boron.
4. The tamper proof label or seal of claim 1, wherein the particles contain an alloy of samarium and cobalt.
5. The tamper proof label or seal of claim 1, wherein the label or seal may also contain a bar code or a quick response (QR) code that identifies the brand of wine and the bottle's serial number.
6. A method of bottle authentication comprising the steps of: applying a label to the bottle that integrates a magnetic physically unclonable function (PUF) material in a particle form that creates a magnetic field, or magnetic fingerprint, that can be interrogated by a sensor device, wherein the PUF material is distributed and dense enough to make it impractical to copy; configuring the PUF material such that if it is removed from the object parts of the label is separated leaving some PUF material on the object and other on the label; enrolling the magnetic fingerprint of the PUF label on the bottle by recording the magnetic field for one or more circumferential bands around the surface of the bottle's neck, storing the enrollment data, and using the recorded magnetic field as a magnetic fingerprint to authenticate the bottle; using a kiosk-type fixture with a rotatable surface at the base that the bottle is placed and centered on, one or more three-axis magnetic sensors are advanced into near contact with the PUF tamper proof seal near the top of the bottle; rotating the bottle to establish a magnetic field profile; and comparing the measured profile against the enrollment data to authenticate the bottle.
7. The method of claim 6, wherein the bottle is rotated at least 360 degrees.
8. The method of claim 6, wherein the bottle remains stationary and the one or more sensors are moved across the surface of the magnetic PUF seal material to establish the magnetic field profile.
9. The method of claim 6, wherein the bottle is laid horizontally on rollers, or other similar device or mechanism, and rotated about the axis of the bottle while the magnetic fingerprint signals are collected from a stationary sensor location.
10. The method of claim 6, wherein when the bottle is authenticated, information is transmitted back to the kiosk-type fixture confirming the authenticity of the bottle, and a certificate of authenticity may be either displayed on a screen or printed.
11. A tamper proof label for sealing an object comprising: a physically unclonable function (PUF) material integrated in the label that creates a magnetic fingerprint that can be interrogated by a sensor device; at least two rows of punched areas that become a tear location when the object is opened; multiple layers in the label, including a rigid or film substrate as an upper layer of the label that contains PUF material, an adhesive layer with the PUF material distributed within an adhesive, release layers that causes the adhesive to separate at lower force levels than the force levels required to remove the remaining areas of the label.
12. The tamper proof label of claim 11, wherein the substrate can be uniquely enrolled.
13. The tamper proof label of claim 12, wherein the adhesive can be characterized and enrolled with the label substrate.
14. The tamper proof label of claim 11, wherein the object is a bottle.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0009] The above-mentioned and other features and advantages of the disclosed embodiments, and the manner of attaining them, will become more apparent and will be better understood by reference to the following description of the disclosed embodiments in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
[0010]
[0011]
[0012]
[0013]
[0014]
[0015]
[0016]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0017] It is to be understood that the present disclosure is not limited in its application to the details of construction and the arrangement of components set forth in the following description or illustrated in the drawings. The present disclosure is capable of other embodiments and of being practiced or of being carried out in various ways. Also, it is to be understood that the phraseology and terminology used herein is for the purpose of description and should not be regarded as limiting. As used herein, the terms having, containing, including, comprising, and the like are open ended terms that indicate the presence of stated elements or features, but do not preclude additional elements or features. The articles a, an, and the are intended to include the plural as well as the singular, unless the context clearly indicates otherwise. The use of including, comprising, or having, and variations thereof herein is meant to encompass the items listed thereafter and equivalents thereof as well as additional items.
[0018] Terms such as about and the like have a contextual meaning, are used to describe various characteristics of an object, and such terms have their ordinary and customary meaning to persons of ordinary skill in the pertinent art. Terms such as about and the like, in a first context mean approximately to an extent as understood by persons of ordinary skill in the pertinent art; and, in a second context, are used to describe various characteristics of an object, and in such second context mean within a small percentage of as understood by persons of ordinary skill in the pertinent art.
[0019] Unless limited otherwise, the terms connected, coupled, and mounted, and variations thereof herein are used broadly and encompass direct and indirect connections, couplings, and mountings. In addition, the terms connected and coupled and variations thereof are not restricted to physical or mechanical connections or couplings. Spatially relative terms such as top, bottom, front, back, rear, and side, under, below, lower, over, upper, and the like, are used for ease of description to explain the positioning of one element relative to a second element. These terms are intended to encompass different orientations of the device in addition to different orientations than those depicted in the figures. Further, terms such as first, second, and the like, are also used to describe various elements, regions, sections, etc., and are also not intended to be limiting. Like terms refer to like elements throughout the description.
[0020] Many wine bottles have a shrink-wrap seal 110 applied to the cap/cork end 121 of the bottle 131 as shown in
[0021] In a first embodiment, the kiosk-type fixture has a rotatable surface at the base that the bottle of wine is placed and centered on. A rotary encoder attached to the shaft under the rotating surface provides rotation angle values for association with the magnetic field readings when the bottle is authenticated. One or more magnetic sensors, preferably 3-axis sensors, are advanced into near contact with the PUF tamper proof seal near the top of the bottle. The bottle is rotated sufficiently to establish a magnetic field profile, preferably 360 degrees, and the magnetic profile is recorded for each axis/component of the magnetic field. The measured profiles are processed and compared against the enrollment data to authenticate the bottle. The processing of the authentication data may take place on a remote server that has access to the enrollment test values for each PUF-protected bottle. The bottle labeling may also contain a bar code or a quick response (QR) code that identifies the brand of wine and the bottle's serial number. This information may be read by a digital camera or other sensor, optical or otherwise, to identify the serial number of the bottle being authenticated. The serial number may then be used by the remote server to select the enrollment data file for this bottle
[0022] In a second embodiment, the bottle remains stationary, and one or more sensors are located on or moved across the surface of the magnetic PUF seal material. This motion could be around the surface of the bottle neck, along the length of the bottle neck, or along any other appropriate surface of the bottle according to the location of the magnetic PUF seal material. Measuring the fingerprint in a circular path is typically preferred because it would require less data storage than measuring along other paths since it allows a continuous read in a known location. Other paths will require additional registering of the starts and stops with path information.
[0023] In a third embodiment, the bottle is laid horizontally on rollers, or other similar device or mechanism, and rotated about the axis of the bottle while the magnetic fingerprint signals are collected from a stationary sensor location.
[0024] In a fourth embodiment, a magnetic PUF disk could be attached to the top or bottom of the bottle for authentication where a preferably flat surface is present.
[0025] When the bottle is authenticated, information is transmitted back to the kiosk-type fixture confirming the authenticity of the bottle, and a brief report or certificate of authenticity may be either displayed on a screen or printed for the customer to take away with the bottle. The report information could include details such as the bottle's serial number, vineyard location, barrel number, bottling location, bottling date, etc. The authentication report could also show all previous authentication records (time, place, authentication location, identification of the authentication kiosk-type fixture, etc.). This information would act to discourage refilling while allowing the retailer to authenticate bottles when they are received from any source.
[0026] In a similar fashion, this invention could be applied to bottles of spirits like vodka, gin, bourbon, etc. It could also be applied to the authentication of bottles containing prescription medicines, or any other packaged product needing authentication.
[0027] In a fifth embodiment, a tamper-evident cap 201 such as shown in
[0028] It should be recognized that a handheld magnetic sensing device containing an array of magnetic sensing elements could be used to scan the magnetic PUF seal material in any of the previously mentioned potential embodiments. The user operation of the handheld magnetic sensing device could be similar to the traditional user experience of a handheld 2D optical barcode scanner. However, instead of capturing optical barcode data, when the handheld magnetic scanner is placed in stationary contact with the PUF seal material an array of magnetic sensors within the reader capture magnetic data at points along the surface of the tag. The sensor builds a map of the magnetic field strengths seen at each sensing element. This sensed magnetic data map is then compared against a previously enrolled magnetic field map, taken at the original time of product manufacturing, to determine if the magnetic fingerprint is authentic. In the event that the magnetic PUF seal material had been tampered with, the magnetic fingerprint collected by the magnetic array sensing device would not match the magnetic data map (fingerprint) that had been recorded at the time of original manufacturing, i.e., prior to the tampering.
[0029] This invention is an application of PUF material into a tamper proof label or seal resulting in a multifactor authentication. The seal has the property that gives it a unique signature over the surface that can be characterized in a predetermined state or after installation of the object that is being sealed for authentication.
[0030] The label has multiple layers that facilitate the tamper function of the label. A substrate may be used as a durable surface of the label. The material may be vinyl, PET, polyester, acrylic, paper or other rigid or flexible material. The authentication may be by human or electronic inspection. The label has additional features to facilitate the breaking of the seal to indicate the tamper.
[0031]
[0032] The rigid or film substrate is the upper layer 411 of the label that contains PUF material. The next layer down is an adhesive layer 421 with the PUF material distributed within the adhesive. There is an optional release layers 431 that causes the adhesive to separate at lower force levels than to remove the remaining areas of the label. The label is affixed to the object or package 441. The release layers may be positioned at different locations within the layers. A key feature of this label is that the substrate can be uniquely enrolled. The adhesive can be characterized and enrolled with the label substrate as well. This allows forensic evaluation of the label before and after separation.
[0033]
[0034]
[0035] The addition of fiber-like structures to the magnetic particles 621 creates an added feature of bridging the separation locations of the tag. The fibers may be pulled out of the adjacent material along the separation line. The breaking or dislocation of these fibers make it impossible to reassemble the label and keep the original enrollment data consistent.
[0036] Preferably, the fibers may be pulled out of the matrix or break in a way that they will no longer perform the authentication function if reassembled.
[0037] Additional evidence of tampering may be provided by selecting a film substrate with modulus lower than the cohesive and/or adhesive strength of the adhesive layer such that the shape of the film and thus the relative distribution of PUF material within the film is readily distorted when removed. The PUF object may be reflow material like a wax that has the matrix material.
[0038]
[0039] This security label can be applied to an array of packages at a time. For example,
[0040] PUF material is imbedded in an electro-active polymer that will be deformed if an electric potential is applied. The application electric potential will migrate the particles by displacing the material and changing the position of the PUF particles. The material can be enrolled in various states so that the correct potential must be applied to validate the object.
[0041] A self-destructing object is created by choosing a matrix that is thermally sensitive, which allows the particles to migrate. Moisture, shock displacement, UV, air exposure, chemical, electrical, or other stimulus may change the object from the enrollment data. This method would be used to invalidate any label due to expiration or recall of material within the package. In this manner, users in the supply chain could reject labels that were invalidated.
[0042] The above invention is not limited to applied labels. The layering process can be integrated into any process that makes the label part of a package or device. The process may be integrated into a molding or extrusion process to make a replacement or original part of a larger device. The tokens be used to authenticate a repair or assembly of a collection of critical devices.
[0043] The foregoing description of embodiments has been presented for purposes of illustration. It is not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the present disclosure to the precise steps and/or forms disclosed, and obviously many modifications and variations are possible in light of the above teaching. It is intended that the scope of the invention be defined by the claims appended hereto.