Charge transport in molecular electronic junctions: Compression of the molecular tunnel barrier in the strong coupling regime

Molecular junctions are essentially modified electrodes familiar to electrochemists where the electrolyte is replaced by a conducting “contact.” It is generally hypothesized that changing molecular structure will alter system energy levels leading to a change in the transport barrier. Here, we show...

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Veröffentlicht in:Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS 2012-07, Vol.109 (29), p.11498-11503
Hauptverfasser: Sayed, Sayed Y, Fereiro, Jerry A, Yan, Haijun, McCreery, Richard L, Bergren, Adam Johan
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Molecular junctions are essentially modified electrodes familiar to electrochemists where the electrolyte is replaced by a conducting “contact.” It is generally hypothesized that changing molecular structure will alter system energy levels leading to a change in the transport barrier. Here, we show the conductance of seven different aromatic molecules covalently bonded to carbon implies a modest range ( 2 eV range). These results are explained by considering the effect of bonding the molecule to the substrate. Upon bonding, electronic inductive effects modulate the energy levels of the system resulting in compression of the tunneling barrier. Modification of the molecule with donating or withdrawing groups modulate the molecular orbital energies and the contact energy level resulting in a leveling effect that compresses the tunneling barrier into a range much smaller than expected. Whereas the value of the tunneling barrier can be varied by using a different class of molecules (alkanes), using only aromatic structures results in a similar equilibrium value for the tunnel barrier for different structures resulting from partial charge transfer between the molecular layer and the substrate. Thus, the system does not obey the Schottky-Mott limit, and the interaction between the molecular layer and the substrate acts to influence the energy level alignment. These results indicate that the entire system must be considered to determine the impact of a variety of electronic factors that act to determine the tunnel barrier.
ISSN:0027-8424
1091-6490
DOI:10.1073/pnas.1201557109