Magnetic Fields Effects on the Electronic Conduction Properties of Molecular Ring Structures
Dhurba Rai, Oded Hod, Abraham Nitzan

TL;DR
This study explores how magnetic fields influence electronic conduction in molecular ring structures, identifying specific conditions that enable observable magnetic effects in small molecules like benzene.
Contribution
It demonstrates that magnetic field effects on conduction are significant in molecular rings when certain electronic and coupling conditions are met, providing practical guidelines for experimental observation.
Findings
Magnetic field sensitivity depends on degenerate electronic resonances.
Weak and asymmetric lead coupling enhances magnetic effects.
Dephasing reduces magnetic field influence but remains observable.
Abstract
While mesoscopic conducting loops are sensitive to external magnetic fields, as seen by observations of the Aharonov-Bohm (AB) effect in such structures, the field needed to observe the AB periodicity in small molecular rings is unrealistically large. The present study aims to identify conditions under which magnetic field dependence can be observed in electronic conduction through such molecules. We consider molecular ring structures modeled both within the tight-binding (H\"uckel) model and as continuous rings. In fact, much of the observed qualitative behavior can be rationalized in terms of a much simpler two-state model. Dephasing in these models is affected by two common tools: the B\"uttiker probe method and coherence damping within a density matrix formulation. We show that current through a benzene ring can be controlled by moderate fields provided that (a) conduction must be…
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