Conductance saturation in a series of highly transmitting molecular junctions
T. Yelin, R. Korytar, N. Sukenik, R. Vardimon, B. Kumar, C. Nuckolls,, F. Evers, O. Tal

TL;DR
This study investigates conductance saturation in highly transmitting molecular junctions, revealing that conductance reaches an upper limit independent of molecule length, influenced by orbital hybridization and contact material, with implications for device design.
Contribution
It demonstrates conductance saturation in high-transmission molecular junctions and elucidates the mechanisms behind it, including the roles of energy level alignment, broadening, and band-like transport.
Findings
Conductance saturates at a length-independent upper limit.
Saturation mechanisms differ between Ag and Pt contacts.
An intuitive model explains conductance constraints at high transmission.
Abstract
Understanding the properties of electronic transport across metal-molecule interfaces is of central importance for controlling a large variety of molecular-based devices such as organic light emitting diodes, nanoscale organic spin-valves and single-molecule switches. One of the primary experimental methods to reveal the mechanisms behind electronic transport through metal-molecule interfaces is the study of conductance as a function of molecule length in molecular junctions. Previous studies focused on transport governed either by tunneling or hopping, both at low conductance. However, the upper limit of conductance across molecular junctions has not been explored, despite the great potential for efficient information transfer, charge injection and recombination processes. Here, we study the conductance properties of highly transmitting metal-molecule-metal interfaces, using a series…
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