Gateway state-mediated, long-range tunnelling in molecular wires
Sara Sangtarash, Andrea Vezzoli, Hatef Sadeghi, Nicolo Ferrib, Harry, M. OBrien, Iain Gracea, Laurent Bouffier, Simon J. Higgins, Richard J., Nichols, and Colin J. Lambert

TL;DR
This study reveals that electronic states on anchor groups can significantly reduce conductance decay in molecular wires, offering new strategies for designing high-conductance molecular electronic devices.
Contribution
It demonstrates both experimentally and theoretically that anchor group states influence conductance decay, challenging traditional models and enabling improved molecular wire design.
Findings
Anchor group states can create resonances near the Fermi level.
These states can significantly decrease the decay coefficient η.
Designing interface properties can enhance molecular wire conductance.
Abstract
If the factors controlling the decay in single-molecule electrical conductance G with molecular length L could be understood and controlled, then this would be a significant step forward in the design of high-conductance molecular wires. For a wide variety of molecules conducting by phase coherent tunneling, conductance G decays with length following the relationship G = Aexp-\b{\eta}L. It is widely accepted that the attenuation coefficient \b{\eta} is determined by the position of the Fermi energy of the electrodes relative to the energy of frontier orbitals of the molecular bridge, whereas the terminal anchor groups which bind to the molecule to the electrodes contribute to the pre-exponential factor A. We examine this premise for several series of molecules which contain a central conjugated moiety (phenyl, viologen or {\alpha}-terthiophene) connected on either side to alkane chains…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMolecular Junctions and Nanostructures · Quantum and electron transport phenomena · Surface and Thin Film Phenomena
