“…Electrical impedance spectroscopy (EIS) (Almuhammadi, Bera, & Lubineau, ; Barsoukov & Macdonald, ; Bera & Nagaraju, ; Bera, Nagaraju, & Lubineau, ; Bera et al, ; Macdonald, ; Orazem & Tribollet, ; Zhang, Bera, Woo, & Seo, ) is a noninvasive, fast, and low‐cost technique of material characterization technique which can be efficient used to characterize the materials on the basis of its impedance. Due to its significant capability of electrical impedance based material characterization, EIS has been applied in biomedical engineering (Bera, ; Bera & Nagaraju, ; Bera, Nagaraju, & Lubineau, ; Bera et al, ; Birgersson, Birgersson, & Ollmar, ; Chakraborty et al, ; Keshtkar, ; Röthlingshöfer, Ulbrich, Hahne, & Leonhardt, ; Ruiz, Zamora, & Felice, ; Sammer et al, ), material engineering (Grassini, Corbellini, Parvis, Angelini, & Zucchi, in press; Grossi, Lanzoni, Lazzarini, & Riccò, ; Greuter & Blatter, ; YanLong, Bera, Lubineau, & Yang ; ; He & Mansfeld, ; Morrison, Sinclair, & West, ; Pulido et al, ), chemical engineering (Adachi, Sakamoto, Jiu, Ogata, & Isoda, ; Echabaane, Rouis, Bonnamour, & Ouada, ; Kern, Sastrawan, Ferber, Stangl, & Luther, ; Longo, Nogueira, De Paoli, & Cachet, ; Lee, Hwang, Mashek, J. J., & Mason, ; Song, Jung, Lee, & Dao, ; Wang, Moser, & Grätzel, ), civil engineering (Christensen et al, ; Ribeiro et al, ), and other fields of applied sciences and engineering (Almuhammadi et al, ; Bera et al, ).…”