First-principles quantum transport modeling of thermoelectricity in single-molecule nanojunctions with graphene nanoribbon electrodes
Branislav K. Nikolic, Kamal K. Saha, Troels Markussen, Kristian S., Thygesen

TL;DR
This paper models thermoelectric transport in single-molecule nanojunctions with graphene nanoribbon electrodes using NEGF-DFT, revealing high thermoelectric efficiency and insensitivity to molecule type, and highlights limitations of empirical potentials.
Contribution
It introduces a first-principles NEGF-DFT approach to analyze thermoelectricity in molecule-graphene junctions, emphasizing evanescent mode transport and electrode symmetry effects.
Findings
Achieved ZT~0.5 at room temperature and up to 2.5 below liquid nitrogen.
Demonstrated insensitivity of thermopower to different short organic molecules.
Showed empirical potentials fail to accurately predict phonon transport in these systems.
Abstract
We overview nonequilibrium Green function combined with density functional theory (NEGF-DFT) modeling of independent electron and phonon transport in nanojunctions with applications focused on a new class of thermoelectric devices where a single molecule is attached to two metallic zigzag graphene nanoribbons (ZGNRs) via highly transparent contacts. Such contacts make possible injection of evanescent wavefunctions from ZGNRs, so that their overlap within the molecular region generates a peak in the electronic transmission. Additionally, the spatial symmetry properties of the transverse propagating states in the ZGNR electrodes suppress hole-like contributions to the thermopower. Thus optimized thermopower, together with diminished phonon conductance through a ZGNR/molecule/ZGNR inhomogeneous structure, yields the thermoelectric figure of merit ZT~0.5 at room temperature and 0.5<ZT<2.5…
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