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Mechanically Tunable Quantum Interference in Ferrocene-Based Single-Molecule Junctions

Author(s):

María Camarasa-Goḿez, Daniel Hernangómez-Pérez, Michael S. Inkpen, Giacomo Lovat, E-Dean Fung, Xavier Roy, Latha Venkataraman, Ferdinand Evers

Journal:

Nano Letters

Year:

2020

Volume:

20

Pages

6381-6386

DOI:

10.1021/acs.nanolett.0c01956

Abstract:

Ferrocenes are ubiquitous organometallic building blocks that comprise a Fe atom sandwiched between two cyclopentadienyl (Cp) rings that rotate freely at room temperature. Of widespread interest in fundamental studies and real-world applications, they have also attracted some interest as functional elements of molecular-scale devices. Here we investigate the impact of the configurational degrees of freedom of a ferrocene derivative on its single-molecule junction conductance. Measurements indicate that the conductance of the ferrocene derivative, which is suppressed by 2 orders of magnitude as compared to a fully conjugated analogue, can be modulated by altering the junction configuration. Ab initio transport calculations show that the low conductance is a consequence of destructive quantum interference effects of the Fano type that arise from the hybridization of localized metal-based d-orbitals and the delocalized ligand-based π-system. By rotation of the Cp rings, the hybridization, and thus the quantum interference, can be mechanically controlled, resulting in a conductance modulation that is seen experimentally.

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