At first glance, measuring resistance seems trivial.
Apply Ohm’s law:
→ R = V / I
And the job is done.
But this assumption breaks down completely when resistance drops into the milliohm (mΩ) or even micro-ohm (µΩ) range.
At this level, the measurement system itself becomes the dominant source of error.
The Problem with Two-Wire Measurement
In a standard two-wire setup:
- The same leads carry current
- The same leads measure voltage
This introduces a fundamental issue.
Every wire, connector, and contact has resistance.
For example:
- Device under test: 30 mΩ
- Lead resistance: 20 mΩ
Measured result:
→ 50 mΩ
A massive error.
The Kelvin (4-Wire) Solution
To solve this, precision measurement systems use:
Four-wire (Kelvin) measurement
This separates the roles of current and voltage measurement:
- Force+ / Force− → supply current
- Sense+ / Sense− → measure voltage
Because the sensing path carries almost no current:
→ There is no voltage drop across the measurement leads
So:
→ The measured voltage reflects only the device under test
Why This Matters
This technique is not just theoretical.
It is essential in real-world applications such as:
1. Battery Systems
Internal resistance determines:
- Performance
- Efficiency
- State of health
Even small errors can lead to incorrect diagnostics.
2. Power Electronics
Components like:
- Current shunts
- Busbars
- PCB traces
often operate in the milliohm range.
Accurate measurement is critical for:
- Efficiency optimization
- Thermal management
3. Electric Vehicles
In EV systems:
- Contact resistance
- Welding quality
- Connector reliability
all depend on precise low-resistance measurement.
The Role of Precision Instruments
In the observed setup, two types of instruments are typically used:
- A Source Measure Unit (SMU) → to provide stable current
- A high-resolution DMM (e.g., 7½ digit) → to measure voltage
This allows resolution down to:
→ tens of micro-ohms (µΩ)
A Subtle but Critical Detail
One often overlooked factor:
Temperature
In the demo setup, the operator touches the metal resistor.
This introduces:
- Heat transfer
- Resistance drift
Because many metals have temperature coefficients in the range of:
→ tens of ppm / °C
Even a small temperature change can affect the result.
High-end measurement environments therefore use:
- Controlled temperature
- Kelvin fixtures
- Automated contact systems
A Broader Perspective
This type of measurement represents a different category in test and measurement:
Not:
→ High-speed signals
→ RF systems
But:
→ Precision electrical measurement
It is often less visible, but highly specialized—and highly valuable.
Conclusion
Measuring resistance is easy.
Measuring low resistance accurately is not.
At the milliohm level, success depends not on better formulas, but on better measurement architecture.
Four-wire sensing is not an enhancement.
It is a necessity.
