VARIATION OF CAPACITIVE REACTANCE WITH
CAPACITANCE History: In October 1745, Ewald Georg von Kleist of Pomerania invented the first
recorded capacitor: a glass jar coated inside and out with metal. The inner
coating was connected to a rod that passed through the lid and ended in a metal
sphere. By having this thin layer of glass insulation (a dielectric) between two
large, closely spaced plates, von Kleist found the energy density could be
increased dramatically compared with the situation with no insulator. In January 1746, before Kleist's discovery became widely known, a Dutch
physicist Pieter van Musschenbroek independently invented a very similar
capacitor. It was named the Leyden jar, after the University of Leyden where van
Musschenbroek worked. Daniel Gralath was the first to combine several jars in
parallel into a "battery" to increase the total possible stored charge. The earliest unit of capacitance was the 'jar', equivalent to about 1
nF. Early
capacitors were also known as condensers, a term that is still occasionally used
today. It was coined by Volta in 1782 (derived from the Italian condensatore),
with reference to the device's ability to store a higher density of electric
charge than a normal isolated conductor. Most non-English languages still use a
word derived from "condensatore", like the French "condensateur", the German,
Norwegian or Polish "Kondensator", or the Spanish "condensador".