AIP Advances (Dec 2016)

Prolonged silicon carbide integrated circuit operation in Venus surface atmospheric conditions

  • Philip G. Neudeck,
  • Roger D. Meredith,
  • Liangyu Chen,
  • David J. Spry,
  • Leah M. Nakley,
  • Gary W. Hunter

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1063/1.4973429
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 12
pp. 125119 – 125119-7

Abstract

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The prolonged operation of semiconductor integrated circuits (ICs) needed for long-duration exploration of the surface of Venus has proven insurmountably challenging to date due to the ∼ 460 °C, ∼ 9.4 MPa caustic environment. Past and planned Venus landers have been limited to a few hours of surface operation, even when IC electronics needed for basic lander operation are protected with heavily cumbersome pressure vessels and cooling measures. Here we demonstrate vastly longer (weeks) electrical operation of two silicon carbide (4H-SiC) junction field effect transistor (JFET) ring oscillator ICs tested with chips directly exposed (no cooling and no protective chip packaging) to a high-fidelity physical and chemical reproduction of Venus’ surface atmosphere. This represents more than 100-fold extension of demonstrated Venus environment electronics durability. With further technology maturation, such SiC IC electronics could drastically improve Venus lander designs and mission concepts, fundamentally enabling long-duration enhanced missions to the surface of Venus.