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Electrical impedance

About: Electrical impedance is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 36015 publications have been published within this topic receiving 371891 citations. The topic is also known as: electrical impedance & complex impedance.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, an alternative model for fitting electrochemical impedance spectra of protective coatings is proposed, which describes broadening of the semicircle in the complex plane, in the absence of corrosion reactions.

170 citations

OtherDOI
TL;DR: The measurement of impedance in human patients is also now rapidly gaining acceptance, and promises to provide a more comprehensible assessment of lung function than parameters derived from conventional spirometry.
Abstract: The mechanical impedance of the respiratory system defines the pressure profile required to drive a unit of oscillatory flow into the lungs. Impedance is a function of oscillation frequency, and is measured using the forced oscillation technique. Digital signal processing methods, most notably the Fourier transform, are used to calculate impedance from measured oscillatory pressures and flows. Impedance is a complex function of frequency, having both real and imaginary parts that vary with frequency in ways that can be used empirically to distinguish normal lung function from a variety of different pathologies. The most useful diagnostic information is gained when anatomically based mathematical models are fit to measurements of impedance. The simplest such model consists of a single flow-resistive conduit connecting to a single elastic compartment. Models of greater complexity may have two or more compartments, and provide more accurate fits to impedance measurements over a variety of different frequency ranges. The model that currently enjoys the widest application in studies of animal models of lung disease consists of a single airway serving an alveolar compartment comprising tissue with a constant-phase impedance. This model has been shown to fit very accurately to a wide range of impedance data, yet contains only four free parameters, and as such is highly parsimonious. The measurement of impedance in human patients is also now rapidly gaining acceptance, and promises to provide a more comprehensible assessment of lung function than parameters derived from conventional spirometry.

170 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A frequency-domain based system for measuring acoustic impedance and reflection coefficient is described, intended for use in acoustical measurement in human ear canals, in which the cross-sectional area of the ear canal at the point of insertion is imprecisely known.
Abstract: A frequency-domain based system for measuring acoustic impedance and reflection coefficient is described. The calibration procedure uses a least-mean-squares approximation to the Thevenin parameters describing the source and receiver characteristics in which the data measured on closed, cylindrical tubes are matched to a viscothermal tube model. The system is intended for use in acoustical measurement in human ear canals, in which the cross-sectional area of the ear canal at the point of insertion is imprecisely known. This area is acoustically estimated from the impedance data, and the reflection coefficient is calculated in terms of this area and the impedance data. Measurements on a variety of closed tubes show the method is accurate over the frequency range investigated (less than 10.7 kHz). The time-domain reflection function is evaluated by transforming the reflection coefficient from the frequency domain, but the finite bandwidth of the measured data limits the accuracy of time-domain response measurements. The method is well suited for frequency-domain measurements in human ear canals.

169 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The voltage V(t) induced by a sinusoidal drive current traversing a 125μm-diameter BeCu wire plated with 1 μm NiFe is observed to be a very strong function of axial dc magnetic field.
Abstract: The voltage V(t) induced by a sinusoidal drive current traversing a 125‐μm‐diameter BeCu wire plated with 1 μm NiFe is observed to be a very strong function of axial dc magnetic field. The basic physics of this phenomenon is explained classically in terms of Faraday’s law of induction and Stoner–Wohlfarth magnetization reversal, which yield theoretical predictions that are in good agreement with experiment. For drive current amplitudes of the order of 100 mA, and frequencies of the order of 5 MHz, the field sensitivity dV/dH can be as large as 1 V/Oe (per cm of wire), which offers the potential for application in relatively simple, very high sensitivity magnetic field sensors.

169 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, an experimentally realizable prototype nanophotonic circuit consisting of a receiving and an emitting nano antenna connected by a two-wire optical transmission line is studied using finite-difference time and frequency-domain simulations.
Abstract: An experimentally realizable prototype nanophotonic circuit consisting of a receiving and an emitting nano antenna connected by a two-wire optical transmission line is studied using finite-difference time- and frequency-domain simulations. To optimize the coupling between nanophotonic circuit elements we apply impedance matching concepts in analogy to radio frequency technology. We show that the degree of impedance matching, and in particular the impedance of the transmitting nano antenna, can be inferred from the experimentally accessible standing wave pattern on the transmission line. We demonstrate the possibility of matching the nano antenna impedance to the transmission line characteristic impedance by variations of the antenna length and width realizable by modern microfabrication techniques. The radiation efficiency of the transmitting antenna also depends on its geometry but is independent of the degree of impedance matching. Our systems approach to nanophotonics provides the basis for realizing general nanophotonic circuits and a large variety of derived novel devices.

169 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
20231,514
20223,479
20211,009
20201,579
20191,924
20181,809