This article may be too technical for most readers to understand.(February 2022) |
The Cole-Davidson equation is a model used to describe dielectric relaxation in glass-forming liquids.[1] The equation for the complex permittivity is
where is the permittivity at the high frequency limit, where is the static, low frequency permittivity, and is the characteristic relaxation time of the medium. The exponent represents the exponent of the decay of the high frequency wing of the imaginary part, .
The Cole–Davidson equation is a generalization of the Debye relaxation keeping the initial increase of the low frequency wing of the imaginary part, . Because this is also a characteristic feature of the Fourier transform of the stretched exponential function it has been considered as an approximation of the latter,[2] although nowadays an approximation by the Havriliak-Negami function or exact numerical calculation may be preferred.
Because the slopes of the peak in in double-logarithmic representation are different it is considered an asymmetric generalization in contrast to the Cole-Cole equation.
The Cole–Davidson equation is the special case of the Havriliak-Negami relaxation with .
The real and imaginary parts are
and
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ Davidson, D.W.; Cole, R.H. (1950). "Dielectric relaxation in glycerine". Journal of Chemical Physics. 18 (10): 1417. Bibcode:1950JChPh..18.1417D. doi:10.1063/1.1747496.
- ^ Lindsey, C.P.; Patterson, G.D. (1980). "Detailed comparison of the Williams–Watts and Cole–Davidson functions". Journal of Chemical Physics. 73 (7): 3348–3357. Bibcode:1980JChPh..73.3348L. doi:10.1063/1.440530.