John Miles wrote...
 Winfield Hill wrote...
 http://www.picovolt.com/win/elec/com...de-curves.html  ...
 that part of my measurements cries out for further bench exploration.
 It represents only one part, and is unconfirmed.  Also, what happens
 if the voltage is reversed?  Are we to believe the diode is a 10M
 resistor, shunted by a diode?  I'm not comfortable with that.
 I'm confused.  Is there some reason to expect the semiconductor material
 to be a perfect insulator with no resistivity at all?  Nothing's
 perfect, and those diodes probably aren't made in the most exacting
 processes.
 I would be blown away if you *couldn't* measure some ohmic current flow
 in a diode at any particular voltage level.
Agreed.  It's the rather low 10M value that raises my eyebrows.
Hence my suggestion that the measurements be revisited.  Picked up
by John Jardine, who obtained similar values, copied below:
Test on a 1N4148.
ForwardV DiodeR
+50mV    8megs.
+30mV    9megs.
+20mV    10megs.
+10mv    12megs.
+5mV     21megs.
ReverseV
-5mV     21megs.
-10mV    30megs.
-30mV    270megs.
John also suggests the measurements may need further refinement.
Oops!  I can think of several circuits I've designed over the years
using diodes for discharge protection that might not work exactly as
I intended, given this observation.  And I recall several circuits
where I intentionally back biased the diode a few hundred millivolts
to insure an open circuit.
--
Thanks,
- Win