Comprehensive suppression of single-molecule conductance using destructive σ-interference

The tunnelling of electrons through molecules (and through any nanoscale insulating and dielectric material 1 ) shows exponential attenuation with increasing length 2 , a length dependence that is reflected in the ability of the electrons to carry an electrical current. It was recently demonstrated...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature (London) 2018-06, Vol.558 (7710), p.415-419
Hauptverfasser: Garner, Marc H., Li, Haixing, Chen, Yan, Su, Timothy A., Shangguan, Zhichun, Paley, Daniel W., Liu, Taifeng, Ng, Fay, Li, Hexing, Xiao, Shengxiong, Nuckolls, Colin, Venkataraman, Latha, Solomon, Gemma C.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The tunnelling of electrons through molecules (and through any nanoscale insulating and dielectric material 1 ) shows exponential attenuation with increasing length 2 , a length dependence that is reflected in the ability of the electrons to carry an electrical current. It was recently demonstrated 3 – 5 that coherent tunnelling through a molecular junction can also be suppressed by destructive quantum interference 6 , a mechanism that is not length-dependent. For the carbon-based molecules studied previously, cancelling all transmission channels would involve the suppression of contributions to the current from both the π-orbital and σ-orbital systems. Previous reports of destructive interference have demonstrated a decrease in transmission only through the π-channel. Here we report a saturated silicon-based molecule with a functionalized bicyclo[2.2.2]octasilane moiety that exhibits destructive quantum interference in its σ-system. Although molecular silicon typically forms conducting wires 7 , we use a combination of conductance measurements and ab initio calculations to show that destructive σ-interference, achieved here by locking the silicon–silicon bonds into eclipsed conformations within a bicyclic molecular framework, can yield extremely insulating molecules less than a nanometre in length. Our molecules also exhibit an unusually high thermopower (0.97 millivolts per kelvin), which is a further experimental signature of the suppression of all tunnelling paths by destructive interference: calculations indicate that the central bicyclo[2.2.2]octasilane unit is rendered less conductive than the empty space it occupies. The molecular design presented here provides a proof-of-concept for a quantum-interference-based approach to single-molecule insulators. Highly insulating silicon-based molecules, engineered so that conduction is fully suppressed by σ quantum interference even for molecules less than a nanometre long, could prove useful in molecular-scale electronic circuitry.
ISSN:0028-0836
1476-4687
DOI:10.1038/s41586-018-0197-9