| Literature DB >> 28112947 |
E-Dean Fung1, Olgun Adak1, Giacomo Lovat1, Diego Scarabelli1, Latha Venkataraman1.
Abstract
We investigate light-induced conductance enhancement in single-molecule junctions via photon-assisted transport and hot-electron transport. Using 4,4'-bipyridine bound to Au electrodes as a prototypical single-molecule junction, we report a 20-40% enhancement in conductance under illumination with 980 nm wavelength radiation. We probe the effects of subtle changes in the transmission function on light-enhanced current and show that discrete variations in the binding geometry result in a 10% change in enhancement. Importantly, we prove theoretically that the steady-state behavior of photon-assisted transport and hot-electron transport is identical but that hot-electron transport is the dominant mechanism for optically induced conductance enhancement in single-molecule junctions when the wavelength used is absorbed by the electrodes and the hot-electron relaxation time is long. We confirm this experimentally by performing polarization-dependent conductance measurements of illuminated 4,4'-bipyridine junctions. Finally, we perform lock-in type measurements of optical current and conclude that currents due to laser-induced thermal expansion mask optical currents. This work provides a robust experimental framework for studying mechanisms of light-enhanced transport in single-molecule junctions and offers tools for tuning the performance of organic optoelectronic devices by analyzing detailed transport properties of the molecules involved.Entities:
Keywords: Photon-assisted transport; Tien-Gordon; hot-electron; single-molecule; surface plasmon
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28112947 DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.6b05091
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nano Lett ISSN: 1530-6984 Impact factor: 11.189