Single-molecule Electronics: Cooling Individual Vibrational Modes by the Tunneling Current
Jacob Lykkebo, Giuseppe Romano, Alessio Gagliardi, Alessandro Pecchia, and Gemma C. Solomon

TL;DR
This paper explores methods to control and achieve cooling of specific vibrational modes in single-molecule electronic junctions, aiming to enhance stability and enable new functionalities by suppressing heating effects.
Contribution
The paper introduces strategies for current-induced cooling of vibrational modes in single-molecule junctions and demonstrates their effectiveness through atomistic calculations.
Findings
Cooling observed in two different schemes
Suppressed heating in targeted vibrational modes
Potential for improved stability of molecular devices
Abstract
Electronic devices composed of single molecules constitute the ultimate limit in the continued downscaling of electronic components. A key challenge for single-molecule electronics is to control the temperature of these junctions. Controlling heating and cooling effects in individual vibrational modes, can in principle, be utilized to increase stability of single-molecule junctions under bias, to pump energy into particular vibrational modes to perform current-induced reactions or to increase the resolution in inelastic electron tunneling spectroscopy by controlling the life-times of phonons in a molecule by suppressing absorption and external dissipation processes. Under bias the current and the molecule exchange energy, which typically results in heating of the molecule. However, the opposite process is also possible, where energy is extracted from the molecule by the tunneling…
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