Phenalenyls as tunable excellent molecular conductors and switchable spin filters
Manuel Smeu, Oliver L.A. Monti, Dominic McGrath

TL;DR
This paper introduces phenalenyl-based radicals as tunable molecular conductors and spin filters, demonstrating through computational methods that their electronic and spin-transport properties can be precisely controlled by heteroatom substitution, enabling high efficiency and conductance in molecular electronics.
Contribution
The study reveals that phenalenyl radicals can be engineered for tunable spin-filtering and conductance properties, overcoming Fermi level pinning limitations in molecular electronics.
Findings
Two radicals exhibit over 80% spin filter efficiency with moderate conductance.
Two radicals are excellent conductors with conductance up to 0.48 G_0.
Tuning of electronic properties is achieved via heteroatom substitution.
Abstract
We demonstrate a new class of molecules for exceptional performance in molecular electronics and spintronics. Phenalenyl-based radicals are stable radicals whose electronic properties can be tuned readily by heteroatom substitution. We employ density functional theory-based non-equilibrium Green's function (NEGF-DFT) calculations to show that this class of molecules exhibits tunable spin- and charge-transport properties in single molecule junctions. Our simulations identify the design principles and interplay between unusually high conductivity and strong spin-filtering: Paired with moderate conductance (), two of the four radicals investigated exhibit above 80% spin filter efficiency that is moreover tunable via bias control. Conversely, two radicals that make modest spin filters are excellent conductors with a low bias conductance reaching . This is made…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
