| Literature DB >> 28071918 |
Na Xin1, Jinying Wang1,2, Chuancheng Jia1, Zitong Liu3, Xisha Zhang3, Chenmin Yu3, Mingliang Li1, Shuopei Wang4, Yao Gong1, Hantao Sun5, Guanxin Zhang3, Zhirong Liu1, Guangyu Zhang4, Jianhui Liao5, Deqing Zhang3, Xuefeng Guo1,6.
Abstract
Biphenyl, as the elementary unit of organic functional materials, has been widely used in electronic and optoelectronic devices. However, over decades little has been fundamentally understood regarding how the intramolecular conformation of biphenyl dynamically affects its transport properties at the single-molecule level. Here, we establish the stereoelectronic effect of biphenyl on its electrical conductance based on the platform of graphene-molecule single-molecule junctions, where a specifically designed hexaphenyl aromatic chain molecule is covalently sandwiched between nanogapped graphene point contacts to create stable single-molecule junctions. Both theoretical and temperature-dependent experimental results consistently demonstrate that phenyl twisting in the aromatic chain molecule produces different microstates with different degrees of conjugation, thus leading to stochastic switching between high- and low-conductance states. These investigations offer new molecular design insights into building functional single-molecule electrical devices.Entities:
Keywords: Single molecule junction; biphenyl; stereoelectronic effect; switch
Year: 2017 PMID: 28071918 DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.6b04139
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nano Lett ISSN: 1530-6984 Impact factor: 11.189