What is a Constant Phase Element?
The Constant Phase Element (CPE)
is a non-intuitive circuit element that was discovered (or invented)
while looking at the response of real-world systems. In some systems
the Nyquist plot (also called the Cole-Cole plot or Complex Impedance
Plane plot) was expected to be a semicircle with the center on the x-axis.
However,
the observed plot was indeed the arc of a circle, but with the center some
distance below the x-axis.
These depressed semicircles have been explained by a
number of phenomena, depending on the nature of the system being
investigated. However, the common thread among these explanations is that
some property of the system is not homogeneous or that there is some
distribution (dispersion) of the value of some physical property of the
system.
CPE equations
Mathematically, a CPE's impedance is given by
1 / Z = Y = Q° ( j
)n
where Q° has the numerical value of the admittance (1/
|Z|) at =1
rad/s. The units of Q° are S·sn (ref
1).
A consequence of this simple equation is that the phase
angle of the CPE impedance is independent of the frequency and has a value
of -(90*n) degrees. This gives the CPE its name. |