International Journal of Reconfigurable and Embedded Systems (IJRES)
Vol 1, No 2: July 2012

AES Encryption Algorithm Hardware Implementation: Throughput and Area Comparison of 128, 192 and 256-bits Key

Samir El Adib (Unknown)
Naoufal Raissouni (National School for Applied Sciences of Tetuan, University Abdelmalek Essaadi, Innovation & Telecoms Engineering Research Group. Remote Sensing & Mobile GIS Unit, Mhannech II, B.P 2121 Tetuan, Morocco)



Article Info

Publish Date
01 Jul 2012

Abstract

Advanced Encryption Standard (AES) adopted by the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) to replace existing Data Encryption Standard (DES), as the most widely used encryption algorithm in many security applications. Up to today, AES standard has key size variants of 128, 192, and 256-bit, where longer bit keys provide more secure ciphered text output. In the hardware perspective, bigger key size also means bigger area and small throughput. Some companies that employ ultra-high security in their systems may look for a key size bigger than 128-bit AES. In this paper, 128, 192 and 256-bit AES hardware are implemented and compared in terms of throughput and area. The target hardware used in this paper is Virtex XC5VLX50 FPGA from Xilinx. Total area and Throughput results are presented and graphically compared.

Copyrights © 2012






Journal Info

Abbrev

IJRES

Publisher

Subject

Economics, Econometrics & Finance

Description

The centre of gravity of the computer industry is now moving from personal computing into embedded computing with the advent of VLSI system level integration and reconfigurable core in system-on-chip (SoC). Reconfigurable and Embedded systems are increasingly becoming a key technological component ...