I am very intrigued by the Fluke8505A multimeter and would like to know what 
you think. I have seen some documentation and the resolution of 7.5 digits in 
the 10V range is certainly interesting. I have an HP34401A and a 7.5 digit 
Prema. I have seen that the HP34401A is not that great in AC. I'd like to play 
with the Fluke 8505A but I'd like some opinions from you. thank you

   Luciano

   Luciano P. S. Paramithiotti
   tim...@timeok.it
   www.timeok.it

   Da "volt-nuts" volt-nuts-boun...@lists.febo.com
   A volt-nuts@lists.febo.com
   Cc
   Data Wed, 22 Jul 2020 12:00:02 -0400
   Oggetto volt-nuts Digest, Vol 128, Issue 9
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   Today's Topics:

   1. Re: Keithley 417 electrometer upgrade to solid-state (ed breya)
   2. Re: Keithley 417 electrometer upgrade to solid-state (Joel Setton)


   ----------------------------------------------------------------------

   Message: 1
   Date: Tue, 21 Jul 2020 19:38:59 -0700
   From: ed breya <e...@telight.com>
   To: volt-nuts@lists.febo.com
   Subject: Re: [volt-nuts] Keithley 417 electrometer upgrade to
   solid-state
   Message-ID: <5f17a6c3.60...@telight.com>
   Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8; format=flowed

   Update.
   I think I'm done with the overall new design, except for fine tuning and
   compensation, which will have to wait until I can build an extension
   cable to work on the plug-in out in the open. I did a lot of
   improvements mostly in the power supply, and added four new multiplier
   ranges, adjustable bias cancellation, and added a switch and new
   circuitry to run the remote-zero solenoid. It's looking pretty good now,
   burning in out in the garage.

   For ranging, I built a new switch with eight positions and a couple
   extra wafers for signal routing, extending the multiplier step sequence
   out to 0.03, 0.01, 0.003, and 0.001, providing maximum sensitivity of 1
   fA FS. I originally planned to add two steps, after seeing how well the
   new IC-based front end was working, bias-current-wise. Searching my
   switch parts inventory, I could only find a compatible one with eight,
   without doing extra mechanical mods. So figured I'd go with it and have
   two left for experimental setups.

   The extra gain to go ten and a hundred times more is provided by a new
   meter drive circuit. I did some experiments with the original ranging
   feedback divider, which looked promising at 10X more, but made it very,
   very slow in response, without fixing up the overall compensation. So, I
   opted instead to change the meter sensitivity by 10X. In principle, this
   was no sweat, but the meter in this machine is 1 mA FS, so needs fairly
   low network resistance, making clamping and protecting it more
   complicated. It would require choosing between probably inadequate meter
   protection, excessive clamp leakage error, and not overloading the
   electrometer's output, which would cause instability on recovery from
   large excursions. This was solved by using a separate opamp follower
   circuit to buffer the original meter signal, and provide limiting to
   protect the meter movement - no more than 2-3 full-scales (mA) worth of
   drive current can be applied, under any condition. This is about the
   same as with the original meter setup. This worked out quite well, once
   I ran the meter circuit from separate supplies. When it was from the
   same ones the electrometer circuit used, it made a relaxation oscillator
   - the slight changes (maybe 10 mV) in the supplies during overload were
   enough to upset the front end, so it would just bang back and forth
   between extremes.

   Once I had committed to the opamp follower setup, the next natural thing
   was to consider getting 10X more still, by having a 1X/10X amplifier
   gain mode, and that's what I did. So, the first 10X shift is from the
   low resistance meter drive loop, providing 300 mV FS, which is a tenth
   of the original 3V. The next 10X comes from switching the follower's
   feedback for 10X voltage gain, while the meter is still set for 300 mV,
   so it reads 30 mV FS from the electrometer output. The other, original
   ranges are the same as before, with about 3 kohms of meter and resistor
   load. The range switch is set up to continue the original 0.3 and 0.1
   multiplier feedback pattern, and route the meter to the original path or
   the new path for 10X, and activate the 10X opamp gain in the last two
   settings.

   It all worked out well, especially the new 30 fA and 10 fA ranges. With
   bias current looking like less than 1 fA most of the time, it's ten
   percent or less of the 10 fA scale, and with the new bias cancelling
   deal, it can be pretty well zeroed out, for short term operation. The 3
   fA and 1 fA ranges are of course so sensitive that they're not really
   usable for external measurements without a lot of watching over and
   tweaking - it can go off-scale at any time from random events, but
   gradually drifts back. They are experimental for now, but very useful
   for making assessments and further improvements - I can really see
   what's going on now.

   The bias cancelling scheme is similar to one I made for an old K410A
   tube unit (now long gone), except that the tube ones tend to have only
   unidirectional grid current, while for this I needed bidirectional
   control. This was done with a ten turn pot driving the LEDs of two
   opto-couplers differentially, and connecting their E-B pins
   anti-parallel so their currents are opposite, and cancel when equal. The
   CTRs of the optos don't necessarily match, but with the right setup,
   there is a range of adjustment near the middle where there's no net
   current out, and at either extreme, a maximum of each polarity. This one
   is set up to deliver about +/- 1 uA. The voltage is set by the load
   resistance, in this case 5 kohms, so about +/- 5 mV out.

   The receiving end of this signal is the high megohm feedback resistor
   array, but only the highest two or three may need it. In the lower
   sensitivity ranges, the bias current is insignificant (even though it's
   still there). The small voltage signal is superimposed on the feedback
   signal voltage at each big resistor's end - the low-Z, feedback end - in
   accordance with the scaling needed. In this case, the +/- 5 mV is added
   at the E12 resistor, and that signal divided by ten is added at the E11
   resistor, and so on. The divider is a 9k, 900, 100 ohm setup, but so far
   I have only connected the E12 and E11. The E10 circuitry would need a
   bit more hacking up of the board, so I skipped it for now but left the
   provision for it. This divider is insignificant compared to the huge
   feedback resistors, and with no current applied, the tiny feedback
   currents go through as usual. When correction current is applied, the
   result is a small voltage causing an excess small current in the
   resistor, that can cancel the input bias current. The E12 one, for
   example, will produce 1 fA/mV, which can cancel 1 fA at the input, if
   the polarity is right. So, the floating output of the opto rides on the
   feedback, and tweaks the bias according to the pot setting. A load trim
   resistor on the opto output sets the desired voltage range. I'm leaving
   it wide for now, but may eventually go narrower. Wide is good for
   experimenting like setting it at zero-center in the 3 and 1 fA ranges,
   where the needle bobs around a lot in both directions. Narrow is better
   for setpoint resolution, maybe after things are refined enough. It's
   also open-loop, of course, without the operator to turn the pot and
   adjust it accordingly - and slowly - not quite tedious, but very slow.
   Also, as the input bias drifts it needs readjustment. You can't do much
   about big, random hits, except wait for the needle to return.

   I'll have more to report after I see how it's actually running later.

   Ed







   ------------------------------

   Message: 2
   Date: Wed, 22 Jul 2020 17:42:53 +0200
   From: Joel Setton <set...@free.fr>
   To: volt-nuts@lists.febo.com
   Subject: Re: [volt-nuts] Keithley 417 electrometer upgrade to
   solid-state
   Message-ID: <e275513b-9a0a-3696-a036-393a5118e...@free.fr>
   Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8; format=flowed

   Ed,

   I can't believe you're working on 1fA full-scale ! This is impressive
   indeed and even though your message gives some very useful explanations,
   I can't wait to see your schematic and learn from it. Of course I'm
   staying tuned.

   Then, at the end of your project, we may have to change the name of this
   list to include the "amp-nuts" side of things !!!

   Joel



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