15.02.2018
Demonstration of a single molecule piezoelectric effect
Researchers from the Institute of Organic Chemistry and Biochemistry of the CAS (IOCB Prague), Institute of Physics of the CAS (IP CAS) and Palacký
University Olomouc demonstrated for the first time a single molecule piezoelectric effect. The study published in the prestigious Journal of the American
Chemical Society represents a breakthrough in understanding the electromechanical behaviour of individual molecules and provides a new concept of the
design of molecular motors, sensors and electricity generators at nanoscale.
The piezoelectric effect emerges in some materials in which the mechanical and electrical properties are coupled.
Either the electric field can be generated if a mechanical stress is applied (direct piezoelectric effect) or, conversely, the mechanical deformation can arise if the electric
field is applied (converse piezoelectric effect). These effects have reached numerous practical applications in automotive, smartphone, computer, medical and military industries.
In our everyday life, we meet the piezoelectric effect in smartphones, microphones or lighters, it is also widely employed in airbag systems, sonars or scanning microscopes.
Possible applications of the piezoelectric effect to nanotechnology are currently under the spotlight and intensively studied. However, the single molecule piezoelectric effect,
which is essential for envisioned electromechanical molecular devices, has so far remained elusive.
“In a close collaboration with physicists, it was proved for the first time that a strong converse piezoelectric effect can be observed at individual molecules of the
heptahelicene derivative, which is a screw-like carbon molecule resembling a spring,” said Ivo Starý, the leader of the group of chemists at IOCB Prague preparing the compound.
The effect was experimentally demonstrated by the group of physicists at IP CAS at individual molecules on a silver surface using scanning probe microscopy. The group
leader Pavel Jelínek explains: “The magnitude of the piezoelectric constant calculated from the experimental data is significantly higher than that one of known
piezoelectric polymers and is comparable to the magnitudes measured at some inorganic materials such as zinc oxide. Moreover, we explained the origin of the single
molecule piezoelectric effect by employing quantum mechanics calculations.”
How does the converse piezoelectric effect work at nanoscale? The screw-like molecule endowed with an inner dipole stretches or squeezes itself depending on the strength and
polarity of the outer electric field. It arises by applying a voltage bias between the silver pad and atomically sharp tip of the scanning microscope that resides over the
studied molecule. As the change in a molecule height can be monitored with an ultimate accuracy, it is possible to see a molecule deformation induced by the electric field.
Such a coupling of the mechanical movement of a molecule and the change in electric field, which is reciprocal by theory, represents an entry into the world of molecules doing
mechanical work on one hand and molecular nanogenerators of electric energy on the other hand.
Article:
O. Stetsovych, P. Mutombo, M. Švec, M. Šámal, J. Nejedlý, I. Císařová, H. Vázquez, M. Moro-Lagares, J. Berger, J. Vacek, I.G. Stará, I. Starý, P. Jelínek:
Large Converse Piezoelectric Effect Measured on a Single Molecule on a Metallic Surface.
Journal of the American Chemical Society, article online from January 16, 2018.