Fyzikální ústav Akademie věd ČR

Institute and media

CERN COURIER, Sept 27, 2012.

Jan Hladký, an experimental...

www.fjfi.cz, 7.8.2011.

The Seventh International Conference...

HiPER News, 3.6.2010.

Members of the HiPER community gathered...

Theoretical results in Single Molecule Transport

Seminar Tuesday, 29/01/2013 15:00 - 16:00

Speakers: Hector Vazquez (Research Fellow, Department of Chemistry, University of Warwick, UK)
Place: Institute of Physics ASCR, Cukrovarnicka 10, Prague 6 / Library Lecture Room, Building A, 1st floor
Presented in English
Organisers: Department of Thin Films and Nanostructures

The flow of current through metal-molecule-metal circuits depends, often delicately, on the details of the structural and electronic properties of the molecule and of the junction as a whole. In this talk I will present recent DFT-based theoretical results on single molecule transport focusing on achieving near ideal contact resistance through metal-molecule linker chemistry and on investigating the conductance superposition law at the single molecule scale. This work was carried out in close collaboration with STM break-junction experiments.

Trimethyltin (SnMe3)-terminated molecules result in direct Au-C covalent bonds between the molecular Carbon atoms and the Au electrodes as the SnMe3 groups are cleaved in situ at the junction. The resulting measured conductance for alkanes is ~100 times higher than with other linkers [1], and near-resonant transport is achieved for conjugated molecular junctions [2]. Theory can explain how Au-C links exhibit near ideal contact resistance.

I will also discuss the conductance superposition law in molecules that have two backbones bonded in parallel to the electrodes. The calculated and measured conductance of these double backbone molecules [3] can be more than twice (eg. ~3×) that of the single-backbone counterparts due to constructive quantum interference.

Attachments:

Copyright © 2008-2010, Fyzikální ústav AV ČR, v. v. i.