IACR News item: 02 December 2025
Xavier Carril, Alicia Manuel Pasoot, Emanuele Parisi, Carlos Andrés Lara-Niño, Oriol Farràs, Miquel Moretó
Recent advances in quantum computing pose a threat to the security of digital communications, as large-scale quantum machines can break commonly used cryptographic algorithms, such as RSA and ECC. To mitigate this risk, post-quantum cryptography (PQC) schemes are being standardized, with recent NIST recommendations selecting two lattice-based algorithms: ML-KEM for key encapsulation and ML-DSA for digital signatures. Two computationally intensive kernels dominate the execution of these schemes: the Number-Theoretic Transform (NTT) for polynomial multiplication and the Keccak-f1600 permutation function for polynomial sampling and hashing. This paper presents PQCUARK, a scalar RISC-V ISA extension that accelerates these key operations. PQCUARK integrates two novel accelerators within the core pipeline: (i) a packed SIMD butterfly unit capable of performing NTT butterfly operations on 2×32bit or 4×16bit polynomial coefficients, and (ii) a permutation engine that delivers two Keccak rounds per cycle, hosting a private state and a direct interface to the core Load Store Unit, eliminating the need for a custom register file interface. We have integrated PQCUARK into an RV64 core and deployed it on an FPGA. Experimental results demonstrate that PQCUARK provides up to 10.1× speedup over the NIST baselines and 2.3× over the optimized software, and it outperforms similar state-of-the-art approaches between 1.4-12.3× in performance. ASIC synthesis in GF22-FDSOI technology shows a moderate core area increase of 8% at 1.2 GHz, with PQCUARK units being outside the critical path.
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