Critical roles of metal-molecule contacts in electron transport through molecular-wire junctions
Journal article, 2006

We study the variation of electron transmission through Au-S-benzene-S-Au junctions and related systems as a function of the structure of the Au:S contacts. For junctions with semi-infinite flat Au(111) electrodes, the highly coordinated in-hollow and bridge positions are connected with broad transmission peaks around the Fermi level, due to a broad range of transmission angles from transverse motion, resulting in high conductivity and weak dependence on geometrical variations. In contrast, for (unstable) S adsorption on-top of an Au atom, or in the hollow of a 3-Au-atom island, the transmission peaks narrow up due to suppression of large transmission angles. Such more one-dimensional situations may describe more common types of contacts and junctions, resulting in large variations in conductivity and sensitivity to bonding sites, tilting, and gating. In particular, if S is adsorbed in an Au vacancy, sharp spectral features appear near the Fermi level due to essential changes of the level structure and hybridization in the contacts, admitting order-of-magnitude variations of the conductivity. Possibly such a system, can it be fabricated, will show extremely strong nonlinear effects and might work as uni- or bi-directional voltage-controlled two-terminal switches and nonlinear mixing elements. Finally, density-functional theory based transport calculations seem relevant, being capable of describing a wide range of transmission peak structures and conductivities. Prediction and interpretation of experimental results probably require more precise modeling of realistic experimental situations.

Molecular electronics

metal-molecule-metal junction

transport

Author

A. Grigoriev

Jonas Sköldberg

Chalmers, Microtechnology and Nanoscience (MC2), Applied Quantum Physics

Göran Wendin

Chalmers, Microtechnology and Nanoscience (MC2), Electronics Material and Systems Laboratory

Z. Crljen

Physical Review B

Vol. 74 4 045401-

Subject Categories (SSIF 2011)

Atom and Molecular Physics and Optics

Theoretical Chemistry

Condensed Matter Physics

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Created

10/6/2017