In Search of Flexible Molecular Wires with Near Conformer-Independent Conjugation and Conductance: A Computational Study
Author(s):
Rikard Emanuelsson, Henrik Löfås, Jun Zhu, Rajeev Ahuja, Anton Grigoriev, Henrik Ottosson
Journal:
The Journal of Physical Chemistry C
Year:
2014
Volume:
118
Pages
5637-5649
DOI:
10.1021/jp409767r
Abstract:
Oligomers of 1,4-disila/germa/stannacyclohexa-2,5-dienes as well as all-carbon 1,4-cyclohexadienes connected via E—E single bonds (E = C, Si, Ge, or Sn) were studied through quantum chemical calculations in an effort to identify conformationally flexible molecular wires that act as molecular “electrical cords” having conformer-independent conjugative and conductive properties. Our oligomers display neutral hyperconjugative interactions (σ/π-conjugation) between adjacent σ(E—E) and π(C═C) bond orbitals, and these interactions do not change with conformation. The energies and spatial distributions of the highest occupied molecular orbitals of methyl-, silyl-, and trimethylsilyl (TMS)-substituted 1,4-disilacyclohexa-2,5-diene dimers, and stable conformers of trimers and tetramers, remain rather constant upon Si–Si bond rotation. Yet, steric congestion may be a concern in some of the oligomer types. The calculated conductances for the Si-containing tetramers are similar to that of a σ-conjugated linear all-anti oligosilane (a hexadecasilane) with equally many bonds in the conjugated paths. Moreover, the Me-substituted 1,4-disilacyclohexadiene tetramer has modest conductance fluctuations with Si–Si bond rotations when the electrode–electrode distance is locked (variation by factor ∼30), while the fluctuations under similar conditions are larger for the analogous TMS-substituted tetramer. When the electrode–electrode distance is changed several oligomers display small conductance variations within certain distance intervals, e.g., the mean conductance of TMS-substituted 1,4-disilacyclohexa-2,5-diene tetramer is almost unchanged over 9 Å of electrode–electrode distances.