Scale-up of room-temperature constructive quantum interference from single molecules to self-assembled molecular-electronic films
Xintai Wang, Troy L. R. Bennett, Ali Ismael, Luke A. Wilkinson, Joseph, Hamill, Andrew J. P. White, Iain M. Grace, Tim Albrecht, Benjamin J., Robinson, Nicholas J. Long, Lesley F. Cohen, Colin J. Lambert

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates how chemical control of quantum interference in self-assembled molecular films can significantly influence their electrical conductance and thermoelectric properties, advancing molecular-scale electronic device development.
Contribution
It provides the first experimental and theoretical demonstration of controlling constructive quantum interference in SAMs through molecular connectivity variations.
Findings
Conductance varies by a factor of ~16 with different connectivities.
Seebeck coefficient can be increased by ~50% through connectivity control.
Quantum interference effects influence thermoelectricity in molecular films.
Abstract
The realization of self-assembled molecular-electronic films, whose room-temperature transport properties are controlled by quantum interference (QI), is an essential step in the scale-up QI effects from single molecules to parallel arrays of molecules. Recently, the effect of destructive QI (DQI) on the electrical conductance of self-assembled monolayers (SAMs) has been investigated. Here, through a combined experimental and theoretical investigation, we demonstrate chemical control of different forms of constructive QI (CQI) in cross-plane transport through SAMs and assess its influence on cross-plane thermoelectricity in SAMs. It is known that the electrical conductance of single molecules can be controlled in a deterministic manner, by chemically varying their connectivity to external electrodes. Here, by employing synthetic methodologies to vary the connectivity of terminal anchor…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMolecular Junctions and Nanostructures · Electrocatalysts for Energy Conversion · Quantum and electron transport phenomena
