English

Runtime Fault Detection in Programmed Molecular Systems

Emerging Technologies 2018-07-24 v2

Abstract

Watchdog timers are devices that are commonly used to monitor the health of safety-critical hardware and software systems. Their primary function is to raise an alarm if the monitored systems fail to emit periodic "heartbeats" that signal their well-being. In this paper we design and verify a molecular watchdog timer for monitoring the health of programmed molecular nanosystems. This raises new challenges because our molecular watchdog timer and the system that it monitors both operate in the probabilistic environment of chemical kinetics, where many failures are certain to occur and it is especially hard to detect the absence of a signal. Our molecular watchdog timer is the result of an incremental design process that uses goal-oriented requirements engineering, simulation, stochastic analysis, and software verification tools. We demonstrate the molecular watchdog's functionality by having it monitor a molecular oscillator. Both the molecular watchdog timer and the oscillator are implemented as chemical reaction networks, which are the current programming language of choice for many molecular programming applications.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1710.09494,
  title  = {Runtime Fault Detection in Programmed Molecular Systems},
  author = {Samuel J. Ellis and Titus H. Klinge and James I. Lathrop and Jack H. Lutz and Robyn R. Lutz and Andrew S. Miner and Hugh D. Potter},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1710.09494},
  year   = {2018}
}
R2 v1 2026-06-22T22:26:00.922Z