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Improving the Traceable Measurement and Generation of Small Direct Currents
Author(s) -
Dietmar Drung,
Martin Gotz,
Eckart Pesel,
Hansjorg Scherer
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
ieee transactions on instrumentation and measurement
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.82
H-Index - 119
eISSN - 1557-9662
pISSN - 0018-9456
DOI - 10.1109/tim.2015.2440564
Subject(s) - power, energy and industry applications , components, circuits, devices and systems
We present the latest improvements in the traceable measurement and generation of small electric currents. A central tool in our traceability chain for small direct currents is a new binary cryogenic current comparator (CCC) with a total of 18276 turns. This 14-bit CCC is well suited for the calibration of highvalue resistors and current amplifiers, but also for the direct amplification of small currents. A noise level of 5 fA/√Hz at 0.05 Hz is routinely achieved. The systematic uncertainty due to noise rectification was exemplarily investigated in a ratio-error test configuration, showing that a total uncertainty of about one part in 106 can be achieved at 100 pA. For further improvement, a new instrument was developed, the ultrastable low-noise current amplifier (ULCA). Its transfer coefficient is highly stable versus time, temperature, and current amplitude within a full dynamic range of ±5 nA. The ULCA is calibrated with the 14-bit CCC at high current amplitude, and allows the measurement or generation of 100-pA direct current with an uncertainty of one part in 107. The novel setup was successfully used to investigate the uncertainty of the established capacitor charging method. A quantum metrology triangle experiment based on the presented instruments is proposed.

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