All Topics  
Contact resistance

 

   Email Print
   Bookmark   Link






 

Contact resistance



 
 
The term contact resistance refers to the contribution to the total resistance
Electrical resistance

The electrical resistance of an object is a measure of its opposition to the passage of a steady electrical current. An object of uniform cross section will have a resistance proportional to its length and inversely proportional to its cross-sectional area, and proportional to the resistivity of the material....
 of a material which comes from the electrical leads and connections as opposed to the intrinsic resistance, which is an inherent property, independent of the measurement method. Placing the test probes of an ohmmeter
Ohmmeter

An ohmmeter is an electricity measuring instrument that measures electrical resistance, the opposition to an electric current. Micro-ohmmeters make low resistance measurements....
 onto the leads of an 100 ohm resistor
Resistor

|- align = "center"||width = "25"|| |- align = "center"||| Potentiometer|- align = "center"| || |- align = "top"| Resistor|| Variable resistor...
, a scientist might observe a total resistance of 1 megohm, 1 kilohm or 101 ohms, depending on exactly how the connection is made.






Discussion
Ask a question about 'Contact resistance'
Start a new discussion about 'Contact resistance'
Answer questions from other users
Full Discussion Forum



Encyclopedia


The term contact resistance refers to the contribution to the total resistance
Electrical resistance

The electrical resistance of an object is a measure of its opposition to the passage of a steady electrical current. An object of uniform cross section will have a resistance proportional to its length and inversely proportional to its cross-sectional area, and proportional to the resistivity of the material....
 of a material which comes from the electrical leads and connections as opposed to the intrinsic resistance, which is an inherent property, independent of the measurement method. Placing the test probes of an ohmmeter
Ohmmeter

An ohmmeter is an electricity measuring instrument that measures electrical resistance, the opposition to an electric current. Micro-ohmmeters make low resistance measurements....
 onto the leads of an 100 ohm resistor
Resistor

|- align = "center"||width = "25"|| |- align = "center"||| Potentiometer|- align = "center"| || |- align = "top"| Resistor|| Variable resistor...
, a scientist might observe a total resistance of 1 megohm, 1 kilohm or 101 ohms, depending on exactly how the connection is made. The contact resistance is then the difference between the measured resistance and 100 ohms.

Experimental characterization


The specific contact resistance is experimentally defined as the slope of the I-V curve at V=0:

where J is the current density = current/area. The units of specific contact resistance are typically therefore in where stands for ohms. When the current is a linear function of the voltage, the device is said to have ohmic contact
Ohmic contact

An ohmic contact is a region on a semiconductor device that has been prepared so that the Current-voltage characteristic curve of the device is linear and symmetric....
s.

The resistance of contacts can be crudely estimated by comparing the results of a four terminal measurement
Four-terminal sensing

Four-terminal sensing or 4-point probes method is an electrical impedance measuring technique that uses separate pairs of electric current-carrying and voltage-sensing electrodes to make more accurate measurements than traditional two-terminal sensing....
 to a simple two-lead measurement made with an ohmmeter. In a two-lead experiment, the measurement current causes a potential drop across both the test leads and the contacts so that the resistance of these elements is inseparable from the resistance of the actual device, with which they are in series. In a four-point probe measurement, one pair of leads is used to inject the measurement current while a second pair of leads, in parallel with the first, is used to measure the potential drop across the device. In the four-probe case, there is no potential drop across the voltage measurement leads so the contact resistance drop is not included. The difference between resistance derived from two-lead and four-lead methods is a reasonably accurate measurement of contact resistance assuming that the leads resistance is much smaller. Specific contact resistance can be obtained by multiplying by contact area. It should also be noted that the contact resistance may vary with temperature.

For development of integrated circuit fabrication processes, far more sophisticated measurements of contact resistance are used, the most popular being the transmission line measurement
Transmission line measurement

Transmission line measurement or Transfer Length Measurement is a technique used in semiconductor physics and engineering to determine the ohmic contact between a metal and a semiconductor....
. The basic idea of the transmission line measurement is to plot the resistance of strips of constant width and varying length that are terminated by similar contacts. The slope of the resulting line is a function of the bulk film resistivity
Resistivity

Electrical resistivity is a measure of how strongly a material opposes the flow of electric current. A low resistivity indicates a material that readily allows the movement of electrical charge....
 while the intercept is the contact resistance.

Inductive
Inductive coupling

In electrical engineering, two conductors are referred to as "inductively coupled" when they are configured such that change in current flow through one wire Faraday's law of induction a voltage across the ends of the other wire....
 and capacitive
Capacitive coupling

In electronics, capacitive coupling is the transfer of energy within an electrical network by means of the capacitance between circuit nodes. This coupling can be an intentional or accidental effect....
 methods could be used in principle to measure an intrinsic impedance
Electrical impedance

Electrical impedance, or simply impedance, describes a measure of opposition to a sinusoidal alternating current . Electrical impedance extends the concept of Electrical resistance to AC circuits, describing not only the relative amplitudes of the voltage and Electric current, but also the relative Phase ....
 without the complication of contact resistance. In practice, direct current
Direct current

Direct current is the unidirectional flow of electric charge. Direct current is produced by such sources as battery , thermocouples, solar cells, and commutator-type electric machines of the dynamo type....
 methods are more typically used to determine resistance.

Quantum limit


When a conductor has spatial dimensions close to , where is Fermi wavevector
Fermi surface

In condensed matter physics, the Fermi surface is an abstract boundary useful for predicting the thermal, electrical, magnetic, and optical properties of metals, semimetals, and doped semiconductors....
 of the conducting material, Ohm's law
Ohm's law

Ohm's law applies to electrical circuits; it states that the electric current through a conductor between two points is directly Proportionality to the potential difference or voltage across the two points, and inversely proportional to the Electrical resistance between them....
 does not hold any more. These small devices are called quantum point contact
Quantum point contact

A Quantum Point Contact is a narrow constriction between two wideElectrical conduction regions, of a width comparable to the electronic wavelength ....
s. Their conductance must be an integer multiple of the value , where is the electronic charge
Elementary charge

The elementary charge, usually denoted e, is the electric charge carried by a single proton, or equivalently, the negative of the electric charge carried by a single electron....
 and is Planck's constant. Quantum point contacts behave more like waveguide
Waveguide

A waveguide is a structure which guides waves, such as electromagnetic waves or sound waves. There are different types of waveguide for each type of wave....
s than the classical wires of everyday life and may be described by the Landauer
Rolf Landauer

Rolf William Landauer was an IBM physicist who in 1961 demonstrated that when information is lost in an irreversible circuit, the information becomes entropy and an associated amount of energy is dissipated as heat....
 scattering formalism. Point-contact tunneling is an important technique for characterizing superconductors.

Other forms of contact resistance


Measurements of thermal conductivity
Thermal conductivity

In physics, thermal conductivity, , is the List of materials properties of a material that indicates its ability to conduct heat. It appears primarily in Heat conduction#Fourier's law for heat conduction....
 are also subject to contact resistance. Similarly, a drop in hydrostatic pressure (analogous to electrical voltage
Voltage

Electrical tension is the potential difference between two points of an electrical or electronic circuit, expressed in volts. It is the measurement of the potential for an electric field to cause an electric current in an electrical conductor....
) occurs when fluid flow transitions from one channel to another.

Significance


Bad contacts are the cause of failure or poor performance in a wide variety of electrical devices. For example, corroded jumper cable
Jump start (vehicle)

A jump start or boost is a term for a method of starting an automobile or other internal combustion engine-powered vehicle which has a discharged Rechargeable battery....
 clamps can frustrate attempts to start a vehicle
Automobile

An automobile or motor car is a wheeled motor vehicle for transportation passengers, which also carries its own car engine or motor. Most definitions of the term specify that automobiles are designed to run primarily on roads, to have seating for one to eight people, to typically have four wheels, and to be constructed principally f...
 that has a dead battery
Lead-acid battery

Lead-acid batteries, invented in 1859 by France physicist Gaston Plant?, are the oldest type of rechargeable battery. Despite having the second lowest energy-to-weight ratio and a correspondingly low energy-to-volume ratio, their ability to supply high surge currents means that the cells maintain a relatively large power-to-weight ratio....
. Dirty or corroded
Corrosion

Corrosion means the breaking down of essential properties in a material due to chemical reactions with its surroundings. In the most common use of the word, this means a loss of electrons of metals reacting with water and oxygen....
 contacts on a fuse
Fuse (electrical)

In electronics and electrical engineering a fuse is a type of overcurrent protection device. Its essential component is a metal wire or strip that melts when too much current flows, which breaks the electrical network in which it is connected, thus protecting the circuit's other components from damage due to excessive current....
 or its holder can give the false impression that the fuse is blown. A sufficiently high contact resistance can cause substantial heating
Joule heating

Joule heating, also known as ohmic heating and resistive heating, is the process by which the passage of an electric current through a conductor releases heat....
 in a high current device. Unpredictable or noisy contacts are a major cause of the failure of electrical equipment. An intermittent contact which alternates rapidly between a high and low resistance is the worst nightmare of anyone who has to troubleshoot equipment.