From tunneling to contact: Inelastic signals in an atomic gold junction
Thomas Frederiksen, Nicolas Lorente, Magnus Paulsson, Mads Brandbyge

TL;DR
This study investigates how inelastic effects influence electron conductance during the formation of atomic gold contacts, revealing complex vibrational mode impacts and providing simplified models for analysis.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive DFT-based approach to analyze inelastic conductance effects in atomic gold junctions, highlighting the complexity of vibrational mode influences and simplifying modeling methods.
Findings
Vibrational modes can decrease conductance in tunneling, contrary to previous expectations.
Overall conductance change is well approximated by apex atom vibrations.
Inelastic effects characterize the transition from tunneling to contact regimes.
Abstract
The evolution of electron conductance in the presence of inelastic effects is studied as an atomic gold contact is formed evolving from a low-conductance regime (tunneling) to a high-conductance regime (contact). In order to characterize each regime, we perform density functional theory (DFT) calculations to study the geometric and electronic structures, together with the strength of the atomic bonds and the associated vibrational frequencies. The conductance is calculated by first evaluating the transmission of electrons through the system, and secondly by calculating the conductance change due to the excitation of vibrations. As found in previous studies [Paulsson et al., Phys. Rev. B. 72, 201101(R) (2005)] the change in conductance due to inelastic effects permits to characterize the crossover from tunneling to contact. The most notorious effect being the crossover from an increase…
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