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Electrostatic Fermi level tuning in large-scale self-assembled monolayers of oligo(phenylene-ethynylene) derivatives.

Authors :
Wang X
Ismael A
Ning S
Althobaiti H
Al-Jobory A
Girovsky J
Astier HPAG
O'Driscoll LJ
Bryce MR
Lambert CJ
Ford CJB
Source :
Nanoscale horizons [Nanoscale Horiz] 2022 Sep 26; Vol. 7 (10), pp. 1201-1209. Date of Electronic Publication: 2022 Sep 26.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Understanding and controlling the orbital alignment of molecules placed between electrodes is essential in the design of practically-applicable molecular and nanoscale electronic devices. The orbital alignment is highly determined by the molecule-electrode interface. Dependence of orbital alignment on the molecular anchor group for single molecular junctions has been intensively studied; however, when scaling-up single molecules to large parallel molecular arrays (like self-assembled monolayers (SAMs)), two challenges need to be addressed: 1. Most desired anchor groups do not form high quality SAMs. 2. It is much harder to tune the frontier molecular orbitals via a gate voltage in SAM junctions than in single molecular junctions. In this work, we studied the effect of the molecule-electrode interface in SAMs with a micro-pore device, using a recently developed tetrapodal anchor to overcome challenge 1, and the combination of a single layered graphene top electrode with an ionic liquid gate to solve challenge 2. The zero-bias orbital alignment of different molecules was signalled by a shift in conductance minimum vs. gate voltage for molecules with different anchoring groups. Molecules with the same backbone, but a different molecule-electrode interface, were shown experimentally to have conductances that differ by a factor of 5 near zero bias. Theoretical calculations using density functional theory support the trends observed in the experimental data. This work sheds light on how to control electron transport within the HOMO-LUMO energy gap in molecular junctions and will be applicable in scaling up molecular electronic systems for future device applications.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2055-6764
Volume :
7
Issue :
10
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Nanoscale horizons
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
35913108
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1039/d2nh00241h