11-19-2013 09:49 PM
Hello Everyone,
Does anyone knows how to measure a very lower current <1uA? What test equipment that able to carry out this kind of precise measurements?
Thanks,
-MJ
11-20-2013
10:15 AM
- last edited on
02-21-2024
09:23 AM
by
migration-bot
Hey MJ,
1uA is low current, but we can certainly measure it. Depending on what you're trying to do, the PXI-4071 and PXIe-4141 are great candidates. Of course, if your application permits a large voltage drop (e.g. 10mV), you could use a large enough shunt resistor (e.g. 10kΩ) to convert 1uA to something a handheld DMM could measure... it all depends on your application.
Tell us more about your application and we can provide more specific guidance.
11-21-2013
11:27 AM
- last edited on
02-21-2024
09:24 AM
by
migration-bot
@Now_With_Underscores wrote:
Hey MJ,
1uA is low current, but we can certainly measure it. Depending on what you're trying to do, the PXI-4071 and PXIe-4141 are great candidates. Of course, if your application permits a large voltage drop (e.g. 10mV), you could use a large enough shunt resistor (e.g. 10kΩ) to convert 1uA to something a handheld DMM could measure... it all depends on your application.Tell us more about your application and we can provide more specific guidance.
I have used both the PXI-4071 DMM and the PXI-4141 SMU for such measurements. Both have pros and cons- just like any other engineering decision. The SMU solution turned out to be an elegant way to measure current with a zero effective voltage burden to the circuit.
PM me if you would like more details .
Jeff