Theoretical Principles of Single-Molecule Electronics: A Chemical and Mesoscopic View
Yongqiang Xue, Mark A. Ratner

TL;DR
This paper develops a comprehensive theoretical framework for modeling single-molecule electronic devices, integrating quantum transport, electronic structure, and surface science to interpret device behavior at the atomic level.
Contribution
It introduces a unified first-principles approach combining Green's function methods with atomic-scale electronic structure analysis for single-molecule electronics.
Findings
Modeling charge and potential response of atomic groups in molecules.
Application to benzene-based molecules attached to gold electrodes.
Demonstration of the framework's power in interpreting molecular device behavior.
Abstract
Exploring the use of individual molecules as active components in electronic devices has been at the forefront of nanoelectronics research in recent years. Compared to semiconductor microelectronics, modeling transport in single-molecule devices is much more difficult due to the necessity of including the effects of the device electronic structure and the interface to the external contacts at the microscopic level. Theoretical formulation of the problem therefore requires integrating the knowledge base in surface science, electronic structure theory, quantum transport and device modeling into a single unified framework starting from the first-principles. In this paper, we introduce the theoretical framework for modeling single-molecule electronics and present a simple conceptual picture for interpreting the results of numerical computation. We model the device using a self-consistent…
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