At the moment I am thinking about the concept of a picoammeter on a vibrating reed capacitor.
Why do I need it.
Some time ago, I purchased about 50 pieces of resonant vibrating reed capacitors DRK-2 "New old stock". These capacitors were developed in specialized design engineering bureau (later became an institute MNIPI) of the Minsk Molotov plant by Shuklin A.S. in the early 60s. The capacitors I purchased were released in 1987. These capacitors were purchased for study and experimentation. I'm wondering what results can be achieved today using these old parts in the front end of a transimpedance amplifier.
At the moment, the stability of the resonant frequency has been assessed. The leakage of the input insulator was also measured. The leakage current of the input insulator was about 2.5E-16A at a test voltage of 100V.
The resonant frequency measurement is given in the attached graph.
I do not like the stability of the resonant frequency, so I will modify these capacitors to get better stability.
What frustrates me, unfortunately, if I publish the full documentation for the resulting picoammeter, no one will be able to repeat it, due to the fact that unobtanium components will be used in the input circuits.
If you are interested, then as experiments and new data are obtained, the results can be published. If there is no interest, then I probably will not litter the forum.