Journal Article PreJuSER-331

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Electrochemical gate-controlled electron transport of redox-active single perylene bisimide molecular junctions

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2008
IOP Publ. Bristol

Journal of physics / Condensed matter 20, 374122 () [10.1088/0953-8984/20/37/374122]

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Abstract: We report a scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) experiment in an electrochemical environment which studies a prototype molecular switch. The target molecules were perylene tetracarboxylic acid bisimides modified with pyridine (P-PBI) and methylthiol (T-PBI) linker groups and with bulky tert-butyl-phenoxy substituents in the bay area. At a fixed bias voltage, we can control the transport current through a symmetric molecular wire Au|P-PBI(T-PBI)|Au by variation of the electrochemical 'gate' potential. The current increases by up to two orders of magnitude. The conductances of the P-PBI junctions are typically a factor 3 larger than those of T-PBI. A theoretical analysis explains this effect as a consequence of shifting the lowest unoccupied perylene level (LUMO) in or out of the bias window when tuning the electrochemical gate potential VG. The difference in on/off ratios reflects the variation of hybridization of the LUMO with the electrode states with the anchor groups. I(T)-E(S(T)) curves of asymmetric molecular junctions formed between a bare Au STM tip and a T-PBI (P-PBI) modified Au(111) electrode in an aqueous electrolyte exhibit a pronounced maximum in the tunneling current at -0.740, which is close to the formal potential of the surface-confined molecules. The experimental data were explained by a sequential two-step electron transfer process.

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Note: This work was supported by the HGF Project 'Molecular Switches', the SPP 1243, the Volkswagen Foundation and the University of Berne and the Research Center Julich. IP acknowledges support of the German Academic Exchange Agency for a PhD fellowship. FE, AA and AB acknowledge support from the SPP 1243 'Center for Functional Nanostructures' situated at Karlsruhe University.

Contributing Institute(s):
  1. Grenz- und Oberflächen (IBN-3)
  2. Center of Nanoelectronic Systems for Information Technology (CNI)
  3. Jülich-Aachen Research Alliance - Fundamentals of Future Information Technology (JARA-FIT)
Research Program(s):
  1. Grundlagen für zukünftige Informationstechnologien (P42)

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 Record created 2012-11-13, last modified 2018-02-08



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