A reliable method has been developed for making through-bond electrical contacts to molecules. Current-voltage curves are quantized as integer multiples of one fundamental curve, an observation used to identify single-molecule contacts. The resistance of a single octanedithiol molecule was 900 +/- 50 megohms, based on measurements on more than 1000 single molecules. In contrast, nonbonded contacts to octanethiol monolayers were at least four orders of magnitude more resistive, less reproducible, and had a different voltage dependence, demonstrating that the measurement of intrinsic molecular properties requires chemically bonded contacts.
Electrical contacts between a metal probe and molecular
monolayers have been characterized using conducting atomic force
microscopy in an inert environment and in a voltage range that yields
reversible current-voltage data. The current through alkanethiol
monolayers depends on the contact force in a way that is accounted for by
the change of chain-to-chain tunnelling with film thickness. The
electronic decay constant, βN, was obtained from
measurements as a function of chain length at constant force and
bias, yielding βN = 0.8±0.2 per methylene over a
±3 V range. Current-voltage curves are difficult to reconcile
with this almost constant value. Very different results are obtained
when a gold tip contacts a 1,8-octanedithiol film. Notably, the
current-voltage curves are often independent of contact
force. Thus the contact may play a critical role both in the nature
of charge transport and the shape of the current-voltage curve.
Stochastic on-off conductivity switching observed in phenylene-ethynylene oligomers has been explained in terms of changes in ring conformations, or electron localization, or both. We report the observation of stochastic on-off switching in the simplest of wired molecules: octanedithiol, decanedithiol, and dodecanedithiol bonded on an Au(111) surface. Stochastic switching was observed even when a top gold contact was pressed on by a conducting atomic force microscope tip at constant force. The rate of switching increased substantially at 60 degrees C, a temperature at which these films are commonly annealed. Because such switching in alkanethiols is unlikely to be caused by internal molecular electronic changes and cannot be fully accounted for by breaking of the top contact, we argue that the cause is the well-known mobility of molecules tethered to gold via a thiol linkage.
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