4.6 Article

Revisiting the Time-Domain and Frequency-Domain Definitions of Capacitance

Journal

IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON ELECTRON DEVICES
Volume 68, Issue 6, Pages 2912-2916

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TED.2021.3073881

Keywords

Impedance measurement; Convolution; Frequency-domain analysis; Capacitors; Supercapacitors; Capacitance; Battery charge measurement; Capacitance; circuit theory; fractional-order capacitors; memory effect

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Capacitance is a characteristic function of an electrical energy storage device that relates voltage and charge accumulation, with time and frequency dependencies. It is recommended to use the integral convolution definition in the time domain for accurate modeling and characterization of supercapacitors and batteries.
The capacitance is a characteristic function of an electrical energy storage device that relates the applied voltage on the device to the accumulated electric charge. It is inconsistently taken in some studies as a multiplicative function in the time domain [i.e., q(t)(t) = c(t)(t) x v(t)(t)], and in others as a multiplicative function in the frequency domain [i.e., Q(f)(s) = C-f(s) x V-f(s) derived from the definition of admittance I-f(s)/V-f(s) = sC(f)(s)], despite the fact that the capacitance is time- and frequency-dependent. However, the convolution theorem states that multiplication of functions in the time domain is equivalent to a convolution operation in the frequency domain, and vice versa. In this work, we revisit and compare the two outlined definitions of capacitance for an ideal capacitor and for a lossy fractional-order capacitor. Although c(t)(t) = C-f(s) = C for an ideal constant capacitor, we show that this is not the case for fractional-order capacitors which exhibit frequency-dispersed impedance, memory effects, and nonexponential relaxation functions. This fact is crucial in the accurate modeling and characterization of supercapacitors and batteries. For these devices, and for being consistent with measurements using conventional impedance analyzers, it is recommended to apply the integral convolution definition in the time domain which reverts to the multiplicative definition in the frequency domain.

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