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Leakage Current and Insulation Resistance 

Measurements Using the Model 2450 

SourceMeter

®

 SMU Instrument

Introduction

To measure the leakage current or insulation resistance of a 
device, you need to apply a fixed voltage to the device and 
measure the resulting current. Depending on the device under 
test, the measured current is typically very small, usually less 
than 10nA.

This application consists of two examples that demonstrate:

•  How to use the Model 2450 to perform leakage current 

measurements on a capacitor

•  How to use the Model 2450 to measure insulation resistance 

between the two conductors of a coaxial cable

The only difference between these two application examples 

is that when you measure leakage current, the results are 
returned in units of amperes. When you measure insulation 
resistance, the results are returned in units of ohms.

The leakage current application applies the voltage for a 

specified period because the device needs time to charge. In 
some cases, the resulting current is measured the entire time the 
device is biased. In other cases, only one reading is made at the 
end of the soak period.

The following topics describe how to do these applications 

from the front panel. They also show how to do them using a 
remote interface with SCPI commands or Test Script Processor 
(TSP

®

) commands.

Equipment required

•  One Model 2450 Interactive SourceMeter® instrument

•  Two triaxial cables

•  One capacitor for the leakage current application

•  One coaxial cable or other device for the insulation resistance 

application

•  One ethernet, GPIB, or USB cable for the TSP and SCPI 

remote command examples

Set up remote communications

You can run this application from the front panel or any of the 
supported communication interfaces for the instrument (GPIB, 
USB, or ethernet).

The following figure shows the rear-panel connection 

locations for the remote communication interfaces.

Figure 1. Model 2450 remote interface connections.

Device connections

Depending on the device under test (DUT), the current 
measurement is typically very small, usually <10nA. Measuring 
leakage current and insulation resistance involves measuring very 
small values. To get more accurate readings, connect the DUT to 
the Model 2450 rear panel with low-noise triaxial cables.

Connect the DUT between the FORCE HI and FORCE LO 

terminals of the Model 2450.

Figure 2

 shows schematic diagrams. One shows measuring 

the leakage current of a capacitor. The other shows measuring 
the insulator resistance between two conductors of a 
coaxial cable.

Figure 2. Connection schematics for the capacitor leakage and insulation 
resistance tests.

The following figures show the rear-terminal connections to 

the device under test (DUT) for these applications. If capacitor 
leakage measurements are noisy, you may need to use the high 
capacitance mode or add a low leakage forward-biased diode in 
series with the capacitor.

Number 3262

Application Note 

Se ries

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