Transmission eigenvalue distributions in highly-conductive molecular junctions
Justin P. Bergfield, Joshua D. Barr, Charles A. Stafford

TL;DR
This paper investigates the distribution of transmission eigenvalues in highly conductive single-molecule junctions, using advanced many-body theory to understand transport properties and the role of molecular orbitals.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive many-body theoretical framework for modeling electron transport in multi-channel molecular junctions, validating the isolated resonance approximation.
Findings
Number of transmission channels equals the degeneracy of the molecular orbital.
Transport predominantly occurs via the HOMO orbital.
Charge carriers exhibit both particle-like and wave-like behavior.
Abstract
The transport through a quantum-scale device may be characterized by the transmission eigenvalues. These values constitute a junction PIN code where, for example, in single-atom metallic contacts the number of transmission channels is also the chemical valence of the atom. Recently, highly conductive single-molecule junctions (SMJ) with multiple transport channels have been formed from benzene molecules between Pt electrodes. Transport through these multi-channel SMJs is a probe of both the bonding properties at the lead-molecule interface and of the molecular symmetry. Here we utilize a many-body theory that properly describes the complementary nature of the charge carrier to calculate transport distributions through Pt-benzene-Pt junctions. We develop an effective field theory of interacting pi-electrons to accurately model the electrostatic influence of the leads and an ab initio…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMolecular Junctions and Nanostructures · Surface and Thin Film Phenomena · Advanced Physical and Chemical Molecular Interactions
