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A package for parsing, validating, analyzing, and simulating impedance spectra.

Project description

pyimpspec

A package for parsing, validating, analyzing, and simulating impedance spectra.

Table of contents

About

pyimpspec is a Python package that provides an application programming interface (API) for working with impedance spectra. The target audience is researchers who use electrochemical impedance spectroscopy (EIS). Those looking for a program with a graphical user interface may wish to instead use DearEIS, which is based on pyimpspec.

The API of pyimpspec implements the functionality required to:

  • read certain data formats and parse the experimental data contained within
  • validate impedance spectra by checking if the data is Kramers-Kronig transformable
  • construct circuits by parsing a circuit description code
  • extract quantitative data from an impedance spectrum through complex non-linear least squares fitting of a circuit
  • simulate the impedance response of circuits
  • perform basic visualization of impedance spectra and test/fit/simulation results

See the Features section for more information.

Check out this Jupyter notebook for examples of how to use pyimpspec. Documentation about the API can be found here.

If you encounter issues, then please open an issue on GitHub.

Installing

The latest version of pyimpspec requires Python 3.6 or newer and the most straightforward way to install pyimpspec is by using pip: Make sure that pip is installed first and then type the following command into a terminal of your choice (e.g. PowerShell in Windows).

pip install pyimpspec

Newer versions of pyimpspec can be installed at a later date by adding the --upgrade option to the command:

pip install --upgrade pyimpspec

Supported platforms:

  • Linux
    • Primary development and testing platform.
  • Windows
    • Tested on Windows 10 (x86-64).

The package may also work on other platforms (e.g. MacOS) depending on whether or not those platforms are supported by pyimpspec's dependencies.

Features

Circuits

pyimpspec supports the creation of Circuit objects, which can be used to simulate impedance spectra or to extract information from experimental data by means of complex non-linear least squares (CNLS) fitting. The recommended way to create circuits is by letting pyimpspec parse a circuit description code (CDC). An extended CDC syntax, which makes it possible to define e.g. initial values, is also supported. Circuit objects also have additional features such as generation of LaTeX source for drawing circuit diagrams (requires \usepackage{circuitikz} in the header of the LaTeX document).

Data parsing

Several file formats are supported by pyimpspec and the data within are used to generate a DataSet object. The file formats include:

  • Files containing the data as character-separated values (CSV).
  • Spreadsheets (.xls, .xlsx, .ods).
  • Ivium data files (.idf, .ids).
  • Gamry data files (.dta).

Not all CSV files and spreadsheets are necessarily supported as-is but the parsing of those types of files should be quite flexible. The parsers expect to find at least a column with frequencies and columns for either the real and imaginary parts of the impedance, or the absolute magnitude and the phase angle/shift. The sign of the imaginary part of the impedance and/or the phase angle/shift may be negative, but then that has to be indicated in the column header with a - prefix. Additional file formats may be supported in the future.

DataSet objects can also be turned into dict objects as well as created from them, which is convenient for serialization (e.g. using Javascript Object Notation). The contents of the DataSet can also be transformed into a pandas.DataFrame object, which in turn can be used to output the data in a variety of formats (CSV, Markdown, LaTeX, etc.).

Kramers-Kronig tests

The three tests (i.e. complex, real, and imaginary) described in "A linear Kramers-Kronig transform test for immittance data validation" by Bernard A. Boukamp (Journal of the Electrochemical Society, 1995, 142, 6, pp. 1885-1894, DOI: 10.1149/1.2044210) are implemented in pyimpspec. A variant of the complex test that uses CNLS to perform the fitting is also included.

The procedure described in "A method for improving the robustness of linear Kramers-Kronig validity tests" by Michael Schönleber, Dino Klotz, and Ellen Ivers-Tiffée (Electrochimica Acta, 2014, 131, pp. 20-27, DOI: 10.1016/j.electacta.2014.01.034) is also implemented in pyimpspec.

The relevant functions return KramersKronigResult objects that include:

  • The fitted Circuit object that is generated as part of the test.
  • The corresponding pseudo chi-squared and the µ values.
  • The frequencies of the data points that were tested.
  • The complex impedances produced by the fitted circuit at each of the tested frequencies.
  • The residuals of the real and imaginary parts of the impedances.

Equivalent circuit fitting

Fitting equivalent circuits to impedance spectra is easy with pyimpspec and generates a FittingResult object. The FittingResult object includes:

  • The fitted Circuit object.
  • Information about all of the parameters (e.g. final fitted value, estimated error, and whether or not the parameter had a fixed value during fitting).
  • The frequencies that were used during the fitting.
  • The complex impedances produced by the fitted circuit at each of the frequencies.
  • The residuals of the real and imaginary parts of the impedances.
  • The MinimizerResult object returned by lmfit.

Plotting

pyimpspec includes functions for visualizing Circuit, DataSet, KramersKronigResult, and FittingResult objects. The only backend that is currently supported is matplotlib.

Changelog

See CHANGELOG.md for details.

Contributing

If you wish to contribute to the further development of pyimpspec, then there are several options available to you depending on your ability and the amount of time that you can spare. If you find bugs, wish some feature was added, or find the documentation to be lacking, then please open an issue on GitHub. If you wish to contribute code, then clone the repository, create a new branch based on either the main branch or the most recent development branch, and submit your changes as a pull request. Code contributions should, if it is applicable, also include unit tests, which should be implemented in files placed in the tests folder found in the root of the repository along with any assets required by the tests. It should be possible to run the tests by executing the run_tests.sh script, which uses the test discovery built into the unittest module that is included with Python.

See CONTRIBUTORS for a list of people who have contributed to the pyimpspec project.

License

Copyright 2022 pyimpspec developers

pyimpspec is licensed under the GPLv3 or later.

The licenses of pyimpspec's dependencies and/or sources of portions of code are included in the LICENSES folder.

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