Reversible Bistable Switching in Nanoscale Thiol-Substituted Oligoaniline Molecular Junctions
Author(s):
Lintao Cai, Marco A. Cabassi, Heayoung Yoon, Orlando M. Cabarcos, Christine L. McGuiness, Austen K. Flatt, David L. Allara, James M. Tour, Theresa S. Mayer
Journal:
Nano Letters
Year:
2005
Volume:
5
Pages
2365–2372
DOI:
10.1021/nl051219k
Abstract:
Single molecular monolayers of oligoaniline dimers were integrated into sub-40-nm-diameter metal nanowires to form in-wire molecular junctions. These junctions exhibited reproducible room temperature bistable switching with zero-bias high- to low-current state conductance ratios of up to 50, switching threshold voltages of approximately ±1.5 V, and no measurable decay in the high-state current over 22 h. Such switching was not observed in similarly fabricated saturated dodecane (C12) or conjugated oligo(phenylene ethynylene) (OPE) molecular junctions. The low- and high-state current versus voltage was independent of temperature (10−300 K), suggesting that the dominant transport mechanism in these junctions is coherent tunneling. Inelastic electron tunneling spectra collected at 10 K show a change in the vibrational modes of the oligoaniline dimers when the junctions are switched from the low- to the high-current state. The results of these measurements suggest that the switching behavior is an inherent molecular feature that can be attributed to the oligoaniline dimer molecules that form the junction.