hoda0013
Mechanical
- Nov 15, 2010
- 3
I am building a device for corrosion testing. To do corrosion testing, the part being tested is submerged in an electrolyte and a current is passed through it. The voltage source is controlled and the current is measured. These are plotted against one another and at a certain voltage, a breakdown of the part can be seen (corrosion).
The device consists of a precision power supply capable of outputting a voltage from -0.6V to about 0.8V and then back to -0.6V. The voltage is increased at a rate of 1mV / second and needs to be accurate to within 1mV. The current is measured using a picoammeter and the current ranges from tenths of microamps all the way up to about 10 milliamps. The current measurement problem can be solved by purchasing a picoammeter which I have done. However, the voltage source may pose an issue. I haven't been able to find voltage source that is both programmable, low-noise (0.5mV or less), and capable of positive and negative voltages.
The closest thing I have found is a power supply (BK Precision 9150) that can output from 0V - 5V and is very precisely controlled (0.1mV line regulation , 0.5mV load regulation)as well as programmable. The problem is that it does not output negative voltages which I need. Is there a way to add in a negative voltage to the output of this power supply to bring the voltage down to -0.6V?
I am thinking about using an op amp to level shift the voltage into the negative region, but the output from the op-amp will be as noisy as it's rail voltages right? I am worried that the op-amp stage will potentially ruin my clean signal coming from my power supply.
Any ideas would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks
The device consists of a precision power supply capable of outputting a voltage from -0.6V to about 0.8V and then back to -0.6V. The voltage is increased at a rate of 1mV / second and needs to be accurate to within 1mV. The current is measured using a picoammeter and the current ranges from tenths of microamps all the way up to about 10 milliamps. The current measurement problem can be solved by purchasing a picoammeter which I have done. However, the voltage source may pose an issue. I haven't been able to find voltage source that is both programmable, low-noise (0.5mV or less), and capable of positive and negative voltages.
The closest thing I have found is a power supply (BK Precision 9150) that can output from 0V - 5V and is very precisely controlled (0.1mV line regulation , 0.5mV load regulation)as well as programmable. The problem is that it does not output negative voltages which I need. Is there a way to add in a negative voltage to the output of this power supply to bring the voltage down to -0.6V?
I am thinking about using an op amp to level shift the voltage into the negative region, but the output from the op-amp will be as noisy as it's rail voltages right? I am worried that the op-amp stage will potentially ruin my clean signal coming from my power supply.
Any ideas would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks