The fundamental relationship is usually attributed to
James Clerk Maxwell (1831–1879). In 1962, Robert Mazur (US Patent 3,628,137) and Dickey developed a practical 2-probe system using a pair of weighted
osmium needles. In 1970, Solid State Measurements was founded to manufacture spreading resistance profiling tools and in 1974, Solecon Labs was founded to provide spreading resistance profiling services. In 1980, Dickey developed a practical method of determining p- or n-type using the spreading resistance tool. Improvements have continued but have been challenged by the ever-shrinking dimensions of state-of-the-art digital devices. For shallow structures (<1 um deep), the data reduction is complex. Some of the contributors to the data reduction are Dickey, Schumann and Gardner, Choo
et al., Berkowitz and Lux, Evans and Donovan, Peissens
et al., Hu, Albers, and Casel and Jorke. == Theory of operation ==