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Journal article

Thermal Gating of the Single Molecule Conductance of Alkanedithiols

From

University of Liverpool1

Department of Chemistry, Technical University of Denmark2

The temperature dependence of the single molecule conductance (SMC) of alpha,omega-alkanedithiols has been investigated using a scanning tunnelling microscopy (STM) method. This is based on trapping molecules between a gold STM tip and a gold substrate and measuring directly the current across the molecule under different applied potentials.

A pronounced temperature dependence of the conductance, which scales logarithmically with T(1), is observed in the temperature range between 293 and 353 K. It is proposed the origin of this dependence is the change in distribution between molecular conformers rather than changes in either the conduction mechanism or the electronic structure of molecule.

For alkanedithiols the time averaged conformer distribution shifts to less elongated conformers at higher temperatures thus giving rise to higher conductance across the molecular bridges. This is analysed by first calculating energy differences between different conformers and then calculating their partition distribution.

A simple tunnelling model is then used to calculate the temperature dependent conductance based on the conformer distribution. These findings demonstrate that charge transport through single organic molecules at ambient temperatures is a subtle and highly dynamic process that cannot be described by analysing only one molecular conformation corresponding to the lowest energy geometry of the molecule.

Language: English
Publisher: The Royal Society of Chemistry
Year: 2006
Pages: 253-264
ISSN: 13645498 and 13596640
Types: Journal article
DOI: 10.1039/b507520n

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