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Steven Swift wrote...
When I needed diode clamps that would work with +/-100mV with less than 10pA of leakage, I always used selected Jfets with some back bias. The DPAD10, etc. series of diodes that were designed for this were too expensive. But that was when I was at Fluke and I could specify exactly what I wanted and the vendors would come knocking. Most of the parts were specially selected from National process 50, which was used to make 2N4416 RF transistors. Yes, the PAD-1 and pn4117 JFET curves on my plot show your point, http://www.picovolt.com/win/elec/com...de-curves.html with about 150 to 200mV forward voltage at 1pA. In that setup, the current for under 100mV was well below what I could detect. The diode equation works over all ranges of the diode. We also used 2n2484 over 9 decades of current (pA to mA) of DC and tested them to be very log-linear. At AC, as already stated, you have to include the capacitance in the model. A finger print on the transistor body would ruin the response. Not to mention the long reverse-recovery time of those parts. I put up my graph to counter Dave's claim of a 600mV "barrier potential", not to argue that these diodes make good low-level RF rectifiers. :) -- Thanks, - Win |