Electronic Flux Density Maps Reveal Unique Current Patterns in a Single-Molecule-Graphene-Nanoribbon Junction
Vincent Pohl, Lukas Eugen Marsoner Steinkasserer, Jean Christophe, Tremblay

TL;DR
This paper introduces a first-principles method to visualize and analyze spatially-resolved electron transport in a single-molecule-graphene-nanoribbon junction, revealing detailed current patterns and mechanisms.
Contribution
It develops a novel localized representation and applies the driven Liouville-von-Neumann approach to simulate time-dependent electron transport in molecular junctions.
Findings
Unique current patterns identified in the junction
Mechanistic insights into conductance modulation
Demonstration of a new simulation approach
Abstract
To assist the design of novel, highly efficient molecular junctions, a deep understanding of the precise charge transport mechanisms through these devices is of prime importance. In the present contribution, we describe a procedure to investigate spatially-resolved electron transport through a nanojunction from first principles, at the example of a nitro-substituted oligo-(phenylene ethynylene) covalently bound to graphene nanoribbon leads. Recently, we demonstrated that the conductivity of this single-molecule-graphene-nanoribbon junction can be switched quantitatively and reversibly upon application of a static electric field in a top gate position, in the spirit of a traditional field effect transistor [J. Phys. Chem. C, 2016, 120, 28808-28819]. The propensity of the central oligomer unit to align with the external field was found to induce a damped rotational motion and to cause an…
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