The article explores the ion flux response of a capacitor configuration to an
alternating voltage. The model system comprises a symmetric binary electrolyte
confined between plan-parallel capacitor plates. The AC response is
investigated for the sparsely studied albeit practically important case of a
large amplitude voltage applied across a narrow device, with the distance
between the two plates amounting to a few ion diameters. Dynamic density
functional theory is employed to solve for the spatiotemporal ion density
distribution as well as the transient ion flux and complex impedance of the
system. The analysis of these properties reveals a hitherto hidden impedance
resonance. A single ion analogue of the capacitor, which is equivalent to
neglecting all interactions between the ions, is employed for a physical
interpretation of this phenomenon. It explains the resonance as a consequence
of field-induced ion condensation at the capacitor plates and coherent motion
of condensed ions in response to the field variation.Comment: This document is the unedited Author's version of a Submitted Work
that was subsequently accepted for publication in JPCC copyright \copyright
American Chemical Society after peer review. To access the final edited and
published work see
https://pubs.acs.org/articlesonrequest/AOR-b3U8aPEYpgkMwTDncn9