We study single-molecule oligo(phenylene ethynylene)dithiol junctions by means of inelastic electron tunneling spectroscopy (IETS). The molecule is contacted with gold nano-electrodes formed with the mechanically controllable break junction technique. We record the IETS spectrum of the molecule from direct current measurements, both as a function of time and electrode separation. We find that for fixed electrode separation the molecule switches between various configurations, which are characterized by different IETS spectra. Similar variations in the IETS signal are observed during atomic rearrangements upon stretching of the molecular junction. Using quantum chemistry calculations, we identity some of the vibrational modes which constitute a chemical fingerprint of the molecule. In addition, changes can be attributed to rearrangements of the local molecular environment, in particular at the molecule-electrode interface. This study shows the importance of taking into account the interaction with the electrodes when describing inelastic contributions to transport through single-molecule junctions.

Probing the local environment of a single OPE3 molecule using inelastic tunneling electron spectroscopy / Frisenda, R.; Perrin, M. L.; Vander Zant, H. S. J.. - In: BEILSTEIN JOURNAL OF NANOTECHNOLOGY. - ISSN 2190-4286. - 6:1(2015), pp. 2477-2484. [10.3762/bjnano.6.257]

Probing the local environment of a single OPE3 molecule using inelastic tunneling electron spectroscopy

Frisenda R.
Primo
;
2015

Abstract

We study single-molecule oligo(phenylene ethynylene)dithiol junctions by means of inelastic electron tunneling spectroscopy (IETS). The molecule is contacted with gold nano-electrodes formed with the mechanically controllable break junction technique. We record the IETS spectrum of the molecule from direct current measurements, both as a function of time and electrode separation. We find that for fixed electrode separation the molecule switches between various configurations, which are characterized by different IETS spectra. Similar variations in the IETS signal are observed during atomic rearrangements upon stretching of the molecular junction. Using quantum chemistry calculations, we identity some of the vibrational modes which constitute a chemical fingerprint of the molecule. In addition, changes can be attributed to rearrangements of the local molecular environment, in particular at the molecule-electrode interface. This study shows the importance of taking into account the interaction with the electrodes when describing inelastic contributions to transport through single-molecule junctions.
2015
Current-voltage characteristics; DFT calculations; Mechanically controllable break junction (MCBJ); Molecule-electrode interaction; Vibrational modes
01 Pubblicazione su rivista::01a Articolo in rivista
Probing the local environment of a single OPE3 molecule using inelastic tunneling electron spectroscopy / Frisenda, R.; Perrin, M. L.; Vander Zant, H. S. J.. - In: BEILSTEIN JOURNAL OF NANOTECHNOLOGY. - ISSN 2190-4286. - 6:1(2015), pp. 2477-2484. [10.3762/bjnano.6.257]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/1624167
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