Conductance Switching of Azobenzene-Based Self-Assembled Monolayers on Cobalt Probed by UHV Conductive-AFM
Louis Thomas, Imane Arbouch, David Gu\'erin, Xavier Wallart, Colin van, Dyck, Thierry M\'elin, J\'er\^ome Cornil, Dominique Vuillaume, St\'ephane, Lenfant

TL;DR
This study investigates the conductance switching behavior of azobenzene-based self-assembled monolayers on cobalt, combining experimental UHV conductive-AFM measurements with theoretical NEGF/DFT calculations to understand molecular orientation effects on conductance states.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the conductance states of azobenzene molecular switches on cobalt, correlating experimental data with theoretical models to identify molecular orientations affecting conductance.
Findings
Two conductance states correspond to trans and cis isomers.
UV and blue light control the isomer populations.
Theoretical models match experimental conductance ratios.
Abstract
We report the formation of self-assembled monolayers of a molecular photoswitch (azobenzene-bithiophene derivative, AzBT) on cobalt via a thiol covalent bond. We study the electrical properties of the molecular junctions formed with the tip of a conductive atomic force microscope under ultra-high vacuum. The statistical analysis of the current-voltage curves shows two distinct states of the molecule conductance, suggesting the coexistence of both the trans and cis azobenzene isomers on the surface. The cis isomer population (trans isomer) increases (decreases) upon UV light irradiation. The situation is reversed under blue light irradiation. The experiments are confronted to first-principle calculations performed on the molecular junctions with the Non-Equilibrium Green's Function formalism combined with Density Functional Theory (NEGF/DFT). The theoretical results consider two…
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