Peer-Reviewed Journal Details
Mandatory Fields
Song, P,Guerin, S,Tan, SJR,Annadata, HV,Yu, XJ,Scully, M,Han, YM,Roemer, M,Loh, KP,Thompson, D,Nijhuis, CA
2018
March
Advanced Materials
Stable Molecular Diodes Based on pi-pi Interactions of the Molecular Frontier Orbitals with Graphene Electrodes
Published
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Optional Fields
charge transport graphene electrodes molecular diodes molecular electronics pi-pi interactions SELF-ASSEMBLED MONOLAYERS SINGLE-MOLECULE TUNNEL-JUNCTIONS CHARGE-TRANSPORT RECTIFICATION ADSORPTION SURFACES GOLD STABILITY DYNAMICS
30
In molecular electronics, it is important to control the strength of the molecule-electrode interaction to balance the trade-off between electronic coupling strength and broadening of the molecular frontier orbitals: too strong coupling results in severe broadening of the molecular orbitals while the molecular orbitals cannot follow the changes in the Fermi levels under applied bias when the coupling is too weak. Here, a platform based on graphene bottom electrodes to which molecules can bind via pi-pi interactions is reported. These interactions are strong enough to induce electronic function (rectification) while minimizing broadening of the molecular frontier orbitals. Molecular tunnel junctions are fabricated based on self-assembled monolayers (SAMs) of Fc(CH2)(11)X (Fc = ferrocenyl, X = NH2, Br, or H) on graphene bottom electrodes contacted to eutectic alloy of gallium and indium top electrodes. The Fc units interact more strongly with graphene than the X units resulting in SAMs with the Fc at the bottom of the SAM. The molecular diodes perform well with rectification ratios of 30-40, and they are stable against bias stressing under ambient conditions. Thus, tunnel junctions based on graphene with pi-pi molecule-electrode coupling are promising platforms to fabricate stable and well-performing molecular diodes.
10.1002/adma.201706322
Grant Details