| Literature DB >> 35685781 |
Shiqiang Zhao1, Ze-Ying Deng1, Shadiah Albalawi2, Qingqing Wu2, Lijue Chen1, Hewei Zhang1, Xin-Jing Zhao1, Hao Hou1, Songjun Hou2, Gang Dong1, Yang Yang1, Jia Shi1, Colin J Lambert2, Yuan-Zhi Tan1, Wenjing Hong1.
Abstract
The van der Waals interactions (vdW) between π-conjugated molecules offer new opportunities for fabricating heterojunction-based devices and investigating charge transport in heterojunctions with atomic thickness. In this work, we fabricate sandwiched single-molecule bilayer-graphene junctions via vdW interactions and characterize their electrical transport properties by employing the cross-plane break junction (XPBJ) technique. The experimental results show that the cross-plane charge transport through single-molecule junctions is determined by the size and layer number of molecular graphene in these junctions. Density functional theory (DFT) calculations reveal that the charge transport through molecular graphene in these molecular junctions is sensitive to the angles between the graphene flake and peripheral mesityl groups, and those rotated groups can be used to tune the electrical conductance. This study provides new insight into cross-plane charge transport in atomically thin junctions and highlights the role of through-space interactions in vdW heterojunctions at the molecular scale. This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.Entities:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35685781 PMCID: PMC9132082 DOI: 10.1039/d1sc07024j
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chem Sci ISSN: 2041-6520 Impact factor: 9.969
Fig. 1(a) Molecular structures of MBLG-C96, MBLG-C108, and MBLG-C114. (b) Schematic illustration of the cross-plane break junction (XPBJ) setup (left) and the sandwiched structure of molecular junctions based on MBLG-C114 (right). The current (in yellow) passes vertically across the plane of the molecule, which is stacked between the two graphene electrodes.
Fig. 2Electrical characterization of single-molecule junctions based on three MBLGs in THF/decane (1/4, v/v). (a) All data-point 1D conductance histograms are obtained from over ∼1000 traces of MBLG-C96, MBLG-C108, and MBLG-C114, which are selected from over ∼10 000 traces according to the plateau length. The peaks with Gaussian fitting are the conductance signals. The inset shows the corresponding typical individual conductance–distance traces. (b–d) 2D conductance–distance histograms of MBLG-C96, MBLG-C108, and MBLG-C114 with the corresponding plateau distributions by Gaussian fitting shown in the insets.
Fig. 3(a) Molecular structure of MSLG-C96. (b) The typical individual conductance–distance traces of single-molecule junctions for MSLG-C96 in the mixed solvent of THF/decane. The plateau in the red frame shows high conductance (HC) and that in the blue frame shows low conductance (LC). 1D conductance histogram (c) and 2D conductance histogram (d) of the molecular junctions for MSLG-C96 with two conductance states (HC and LC) in THF/decane, which are obtained from over ∼1000 traces. (e) Comparison of 1D conductance histograms of the single-molecule junctions for MBLG-C96 and MSLG-C96 (C2H2Cl4/CCl4 = 1/9, v/v) with Gaussian fitting. The data-point 1D conductance histograms are obtained from over ∼1000 traces of MSLG-C96 and selected from over ∼10 000 traces according to the plateau length, and the inset shows the corresponding typical individual traces. (f) 2D conductance histogram of the single-molecule junctions for MSLG-C96 in C2H2Cl4/CCl4, and the inset is the corresponding plateau length with Gaussian fitting.
Fig. 4Theoretical simulations for molecular graphene. Sandwiched structures of the molecular junction based on MBLG-C114 (a) and MSLG-C96 (b). (c) The average transmission function of MBLG-C96 (salmon curve), MBLG-C108 (purple curve), MBLG-C114 (orange curve), and MSLG-C96 (blue curve) as a function of the Fermi energy E, estimated by density functional theory (DFT). The average transmission function is obtained from those of different contact geometries (see Fig. S26–S32† for details). Fermi energy EF is shown by the gray vertical dashed line, which is predicted by DFT.