Publication | Open Access
Detecting Sabotage Attacks in Additive Manufacturing Using Actuator Power Signatures
37
Citations
21
References
2019
Year
Hardware TrojanEngineeringInformation SecuritySingle Toolpath CommandDigital ManufacturingInformation ForensicsAdvanced ManufacturingFormal VerificationScada SecuritySystems EngineeringCps SecurityCounterfeit Electronic ComponentRuntime VerificationSabotage AttacksComputer EngineeringAm Process3D PrintingCryptographyAutomationControl System SecurityTechnology
Additive manufacturing (AM), a.k.a. 3D printing is increasingly used to manufacture functional parts of safety-critical systems. The AM's dependence on computerization raises the concern that the AM process can be tampered with, and a part's mechanical properties sabotaged. To address this threat, we propose a novel approach for detecting sabotage attacks based on trusted monitoring of the current delivered to each printer motor. The proposed approach offers numerous advantages: 1) it is non-invasive in a time-critical process, 2) it can be retrofitted in legacy systems, and 3) it can be air-gapped from the computerized components of the AM process, making simultaneous compromise more difficult. We evaluated the approach on five categories of toolpath command-level manipulations that impact the geometry of the 3D printed object. Our evaluation showed that all but one tested category of attacks can be reliably detected, even if a single toolpath command is modified.
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