How an electrical current can stabilize a molecular nanojunction
Andr\'e Erpenbeck, Yaling Ke, Uri Peskin, Michael Thoss

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that current-induced stabilization of molecular junctions depends on conductance changes during dissociation, revealing a new mechanism that enhances stability in certain configurations.
Contribution
It introduces a numerically exact framework to analyze current-induced conductance changes and stability in molecular junctions, highlighting a novel stabilization mechanism.
Findings
Junctions with decreasing conductance upon dissociation are more stable.
Characteristic current signatures relate to lead properties, not just molecular features.
A new stabilization mechanism based on conductance behavior is identified.
Abstract
The stability of molecular junctions under transport is of the utmost importance for the field of molecular electronics. This question is often addressed within the paradigm of current-induced heating of nuclear degrees of freedom or current-induced forces acting upon the nuclei. At the same time, an essential characteristic of the failure of a molecular electronic device is its changing conductance -- typically from a finite value for the intact device to zero for a device that lost its functionality. In this publication, we focus on the current-induced changes in the molecular conductance, which are inherent to molecular junctions at the limit of mechanical stability. We employ a numerically exact framework based on the hierarchical equations of motion approach, which treats both electronic and nuclear degrees of freedom on an equal footing and does not impose additional assumptions.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMolecular Junctions and Nanostructures · Force Microscopy Techniques and Applications · Quantum and electron transport phenomena
