Image charge effects in single-molecule junctions: Breaking of symmetries and negative differential resistance in a benzene transistor
K. Kaasbjerg, K. Flensberg

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that image charge interactions in benzene single-molecule transistors break molecular symmetries, induce blocking states, and cause negative differential resistance, with effects depending on coupling asymmetries and bias conditions.
Contribution
It introduces a theoretical framework showing how image charge effects break molecular symmetries and lead to NDR in benzene transistors, revealing complex dependencies on system parameters.
Findings
Image charge interactions break molecular symmetries in benzene SETs.
Blocking states cause negative differential resistance.
NDR magnitude depends on coupling asymmetry and bias polarity.
Abstract
Both experiments and theoretical studies have demonstrated that the interaction between the current carrying electrons and the induced polarization charge in single-molecule junctions leads to a strong renormalization of molecular charging energies. However, the effect on electronic excitations and molecular symmetries remain unclear. Using a theoretical framework developed for semiconductor nanostructure based single-electron transistors (SETs), we demonstrate that the image charge interaction breaks the molecular symmetries in a benzene based single-molecule transistor operating in the Coulomb blockade regime. This results in the appearance of a so-called blocking state, which gives rise to negative differential resistance (NDR). We show that the appearance of NDR and its magnitude in the symmetry-broken benzene SET depends in a complicated way on the interplay between the many-body…
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