Author Topic: LCR meter for sub 10nH inductors?  (Read 16493 times)

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Offline reagleTopic starter

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LCR meter for sub 10nH inductors?
« on: January 26, 2015, 04:21:20 pm »
Looking for an LCR meter that could handle measuring inductors down to nH, I mostly stumble on things like Agilent/Keysight 4285A at a cool tune of $8k or more.
 Are there any other ones the esteemed forum could suggest as slightly cheaper alternatives?
 
 
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Offline owiecc

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Re: LCR meter for sub 10nH inductors?
« Reply #1 on: January 26, 2015, 05:11:17 pm »
How accurately do you want to measure? What form factor do you want to use? SMD?
Assuming these inductors will have DC resistance in few m? range you need to go to about 10MHz to get a reasonable accuracy. So yes, you will probably need an old HP/Agilent to measure them. Additionally, you will need a SMD adaptor and calibration standards. It is not a trivial task.
 

Offline jaxbird

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Re: LCR meter for sub 10nH inductors?
« Reply #2 on: January 26, 2015, 06:13:04 pm »
It does require some serious precision instrument to measure nH, as in it must have very low residual inductance. I have been looking for something similar, but it's pretty expensive.

1nH is like 1mm of hookup wire or even less PCB trace.

Agree with owiecc, a 2nd hand HP/Agilent is probably your best bet.

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Offline HighVoltage

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Re: LCR meter for sub 10nH inductors?
« Reply #3 on: January 26, 2015, 06:14:05 pm »
The Fluke PM6306 goes down to 10nH
But it is probably in the same price range as the Keysight 4285A



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Offline robrenz

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Re: LCR meter for sub 10nH inductors?
« Reply #4 on: January 26, 2015, 07:36:01 pm »
Just for fun I thought I would give the DE-5000 a try since it does have 1nH resolution.
I used a piece of 20ga copper which should be 10nH for 1.43cm length at 100kHz.
Did the Cal routine using real Kelvin connections at 100kHz and did the short part of the Cal on the wire with the kelvin clips touching each other for zero wire length. Toggled out of successful Cal and get a reading bobbling between 0 and 1 nH. move the clips apart to 1.43cm and I get 16nH. I realize that is just over a 50% of reading error but that is almost in spec of the 2.5% of reading + 5 lsd tolerance. I was surprised it was that good.
 
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Offline barnacle2k

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Re: LCR meter for sub 10nH inductors?
« Reply #5 on: January 26, 2015, 07:54:54 pm »
Vector network analyzer, HP 8753 or similar, it can resolve picohenrys. (Hint: Its not easy and requires elaborate setups)
« Last Edit: January 26, 2015, 07:57:30 pm by barnacle2k »
 

Offline reagleTopic starter

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Re: LCR meter for sub 10nH inductors?
« Reply #6 on: January 26, 2015, 08:18:13 pm »
Good point- we do have RF gear here!
Instek CR-8101G ($6k new) is another option
 

Online edavid

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Re: LCR meter for sub 10nH inductors?
« Reply #7 on: January 26, 2015, 08:25:23 pm »
If you happen to find an HP 4815A at a reasonable price, it's much simpler to use than a full VNA.

However, you usually need to measure a larger piece of circuit than just the inductor, in which case the VNA is better.
 

Offline Pjotr

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Re: LCR meter for sub 10nH inductors?
« Reply #8 on: January 26, 2015, 08:26:03 pm »
What about the TEGAM Model 3550  http://www.tegam.com/product.asp?modelNumber=3550

It's out of production now  but still available. Have used this one extensively for characterising SMPS transformers and pulse transformers and it did a good job with that. 8 years ago it was half the price of a comparable Agilent.
 

Offline reagleTopic starter

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Re: LCR meter for sub 10nH inductors?
« Reply #9 on: January 26, 2015, 08:27:38 pm »
Very true. The UI on our HP VNA is a royal PITA to get used to
If you happen to find an HP 4815A at a reasonable price, it's much simpler to use than a full VNA.

However, you usually need to measure a larger piece of circuit than just the inductor, in which case the VNA is better.

Offline reagleTopic starter

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Re: LCR meter for sub 10nH inductors?
« Reply #10 on: January 26, 2015, 08:55:20 pm »
Never heard of them- thanks!

What about the TEGAM Model 3550  http://www.tegam.com/product.asp?modelNumber=3550

It's out of production now  but still available. Have used this one extensively for characterising SMPS transformers and pulse transformers and it did a good job with that. 8 years ago it was half the price of a comparable Agilent.

Offline Vgkid

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Re: LCR meter for sub 10nH inductors?
« Reply #11 on: January 26, 2015, 09:06:50 pm »
The IET Labs/ Quadtech 7600(+) does sub 10nH measurements, just don't look at the price.
L: 0000.001 nH to 99.99999 H
Measurement Fast Medium Slow
Accuracy: LCR: ± 0.5%1 ± 0.25%1 ± 0.05%1
DF: ± 0.005 ± 0.0025 ± 0.0005
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Offline KJDS

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Re: LCR meter for sub 10nH inductors?
« Reply #12 on: January 26, 2015, 09:43:13 pm »
Very true. The UI on our HP VNA is a royal PITA to get used to
If you happen to find an HP 4815A at a reasonable price, it's much simpler to use than a full VNA.

However, you usually need to measure a larger piece of circuit than just the inductor, in which case the VNA is better.

If you think the UI on a HP VNA is bad, try using one from R&S or Anritsu.

Offline barnacle2k

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Re: LCR meter for sub 10nH inductors?
« Reply #13 on: January 26, 2015, 10:49:51 pm »
If you think the UI on a HP VNA is bad, try using one from R&S or Anritsu.

+1 the UI on old R&S VNAs is just appalling.
IMO the HP ones are pretty straight forward for the most used functions. (Advanced stuff and custom CALs another story)


Since you mentioned you have a VNA at your disposal i would really recommend using it.
HP / AgiSight has very good instructions / app notes for their VNAs that show how to measure stuff.
I am certain there is one exactly for this problem that will teach you how to measure your inductor correctly.


edit: fixed wrong quote
« Last Edit: January 26, 2015, 11:05:29 pm by barnacle2k »
 

Offline nuno

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Re: LCR meter for sub 10nH inductors?
« Reply #14 on: January 26, 2015, 10:55:16 pm »
 

Offline KJDS

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Re: LCR meter for sub 10nH inductors?
« Reply #15 on: January 26, 2015, 11:24:32 pm »
If you think the UI on a HP VNA is bad, try using one from R&S or Anritsu.

I did not say this!

I did not suggest that you did, it's just that the quotes got a little muxed ip

Offline G0HZU

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Re: LCR meter for sub 10nH inductors?
« Reply #16 on: January 26, 2015, 11:27:08 pm »
I'd use a VNA for stuff like this but there are a few caveats...

Depending on the form factor of the inductor under test its inductance will be affected by the test frequency and its proximity to ground. Also it will be affected by how it is soldered or held in a test fixture.

But there are cheaper ways to measure inductors around 10nH with reasonable accuracy if you don't mind testing it at lowish frequencies. eg you could use a scope and a sig gen and a sense resistor (and a few sums).

Or you could measure it with a decent quality resonating capacitor (small and SMD with low package  inductance) and cheap and a basic spectrum analyser if it has a tracking gen. eg something like a Rigol 815TG. This way you could test it at various frequencies.

But it gets harder as you try measuring down at maybe 3 or 4nH and the VNA + test fixture is a good option provided you accept that the inductance can be affected when mounted on a PCB or very close to a ground area. So what you measure in the VNA test fixture might not hold once you transfer the inductor to a PCB or some other environment.

 

Offline Terabyte2007

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Re: LCR meter for sub 10nH inductors?
« Reply #17 on: January 27, 2015, 08:41:31 pm »
Just for fun I thought I would give the DE-5000 a try since it does have 1nH resolution.
I used a piece of 20ga copper which should be 10nH for 1.43cm length at 100kHz.
Did the Cal routine using real Kelvin connections at 100kHz and did the short part of the Cal on the wire with the kelvin clips touching each other for zero wire length. Toggled out of successful Cal and get a reading bobbling between 0 and 1 nH. move the clips apart to 1.43cm and I get 16nH. I realize that is just over a 50% of reading error but that is almost in spec of the 2.5% of reading + 5 lsd tolerance. I was surprised it was that good.

It would be interesting to see how the DE-5000 compared to the Agilent or Fluke! Nevertheless, I think the test you did was pretty cool. I have the DE-6000 and have measured some pretty small inductors but never tried that. I just might give it a try and see what I get!  ;D
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Offline JuiceKing

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Re: LCR meter for sub 10nH inductors?
« Reply #18 on: January 27, 2015, 09:01:45 pm »
Looking for an LCR meter that could handle measuring inductors down to nH, I mostly stumble on things like Agilent/Keysight 4285A at a cool tune of $8k or more.
 Are there any other ones the esteemed forum could suggest as slightly cheaper alternatives?

The ancient General Radio 1632-A has 0.1nH resolution, but it can be, um, a challenge to find a null that precisely! The manual recommends using two tuned amplifiers in series when working the last digits. The bridge is rated to 0.1% when calibrated. Normally you use it with a 1000Hz test signal; above 5kHz, residual impedance in the bridge degrades accuracy.
 

Offline robrenz

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Re: LCR meter for sub 10nH inductors?
« Reply #19 on: January 27, 2015, 11:33:33 pm »
Just for fun I thought I would give the DE-5000 a try since it does have 1nH resolution.
I used a piece of 20ga copper which should be 10nH for 1.43cm length at 100kHz.
Did the Cal routine using real Kelvin connections at 100kHz and did the short part of the Cal on the wire with the kelvin clips touching each other for zero wire length. Toggled out of successful Cal and get a reading bobbling between 0 and 1 nH. move the clips apart to 1.43cm and I get 16nH. I realize that is just over a 50% of reading error but that is almost in spec of the 2.5% of reading + 5 lsd tolerance. I was surprised it was that good.

It would be interesting to see how the DE-5000 compared to the Agilent or Fluke! Nevertheless, I think the test you did was pretty cool. I have the DE-6000 and have measured some pretty small inductors but never tried that. I just might give it a try and see what I get!  ;D


I am using the clips I made in this thread

Offline Howardlong

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Re: LCR meter for sub 10nH inductors?
« Reply #20 on: January 27, 2015, 11:37:35 pm »
Vector network analyzer, HP 8753 or similar, it can resolve picohenrys. (Hint: Its not easy and requires elaborate setups)

That's exactly what I do, I thought I was just being a bit cheap not having a gadget that does it off the bat.

It's so rare I need to measure inductance, it's not a big deal to set up and cal a test fixture. My 8753A's battery backup memory has never worked anyway so I'm quite used to recalibrating every time I switch it on!
 

Online joeqsmith

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Re: LCR meter for sub 10nH inductors?
« Reply #21 on: January 28, 2015, 02:02:36 am »
My cheapo B&K 878 can't do anything near that low.  However, I can with my antique 8754A VNA.   I just use some test boards to solder the parts to that I want to test.  The same boards are used to cal the VNA.   

Offline T3sl4co1l

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Re: LCR meter for sub 10nH inductors?
« Reply #22 on: January 28, 2015, 03:27:32 am »
Another methodological question:

What are you doing that needs accurate values around 10nH?  Surely you're dealing with transmission line segments by then?  Would it not be better to evaluate the system (filter or whatever) as a whole, not on a per-component basis?

In which case, a frequency sweep, spec + TG, network analyzer or whatever would be the way to go.

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Offline Rupunzell

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Re: LCR meter for sub 10nH inductors?
« Reply #23 on: January 28, 2015, 03:48:47 am »
Boonton 250A (circa 1954) or hp 250B.

Either does nicely at measuring inductors in this range up to 200 Mhz.


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Offline JuiceKing

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Re: LCR meter for sub 10nH inductors?
« Reply #24 on: January 30, 2015, 11:14:04 am »
Looking for an LCR meter that could handle measuring inductors down to nH, I mostly stumble on things like Agilent/Keysight 4285A at a cool tune of $8k or more.
 Are there any other ones the esteemed forum could suggest as slightly cheaper alternatives?

The ancient General Radio 1632-A has 0.1nH resolution, but it can be, um, a challenge to find a null that precisely! The manual recommends using two tuned amplifiers in series when working the last digits. The bridge is rated to 0.1% when calibrated. Normally you use it with a 1000Hz test signal; above 5kHz, residual impedance in the bridge degrades accuracy.

I gave this a try on a GR 1632A with a nominal 1uH inductor, and found I could reliably resolve to the nearest 1nH at 1000Hz. There was enough continuous downward drift (due to heating of the DUT, I expect) in the last hundredths of Mhos of conductance that it was just too hard to reliably resolve inductance to 0.1nH. I used a GR 1232A tuned amplifier with an audio band spectrum analyzer to do this. (It was also possible, but harder to do, with a scope bandwidth limited to 1000Hz instead of the SA.)
 


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