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Conductance and Geometry of Pyridine-Linked Single-Molecule Junctions

Author(s):

Maria Kamenetska, Su Ying Quek, Adam C. Whalley, Michael L. Steigerwald, Hyoung J. Choi, Steven G. Louie, Colin Nuckolls, Mark S. Hybertsen, Jeffrey B. Neaton, Latha Venkataraman

Journal:

Journal of the American Chemical Society

Year:

2010

Volume:

132

Pages

6817-6821

DOI:

10.1021/ja1015348

Abstract:

We have measured the conductance and characterized molecule−electrode binding geometries of four pyridine-terminated molecules by elongating and then compressing gold point contacts in a solution of molecules. We have found that all pyridine-terminated molecules exhibit bistable conductance signatures, signifying that the nature of the pyridine−gold bond allows two distinct conductance states that are accessed as the gold−molecule−gold junction is elongated. We have identified the low-conductance state as corresponding to a molecule fully stretched out between the gold electrodes, where the distance between contacts correlates with the length of the molecule; the high-conductance state is due to a molecule bound at an angle. For all molecules, we have found that the distribution of junction elongations in the low-conductance state is the same, while in the high-conductance state, the most likely elongation length increases linearly with molecule length. The results of first-principles conductance calculations for the four molecules in the low-conductance geometry agree well with the experimental results and show that the dominant conducting channel in the conjugated pyridine-linked molecules is through the π* orbital.

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