Quantum interference
(QI) of electron waves passing through a single-molecule
junction provides a powerful means to influence its electrical properties.
Here, we investigate the correlation between substitution pattern,
conductance, and mechanosensitivity in [2.2]paracyclophane (PCP)-based
molecular wires in a mechanically controlled break junction experiment.
The effect of the meta versus para connectivity in both the central PCP core and the phenyl ring connecting
the terminal anchoring group is studied. We find that the meta-phenyl-anchored PCP yields such low conductance levels
that molecular features cannot be resolved; in the case of para-phenyl-coupled anchoring, however, large variations
in conductance values for modulations of the electrode separation
occur for the pseudo-para-coupled PCP core, while
this mechanosensitivity is absent for the pseudo-meta-PCP core. The experimental findings are interpreted in terms of
QI effects between molecular frontier orbitals by theoretical calculations
based on density functional theory and the Landauer formalism.
The possibility to study quantum interference phenomena at ambient conditions is an appealing feature of molecular electronics. By connecting two porphyrins in a cofacial cyclophane, we create an attractive platform...
The switching behavior of surface‐supported molecular units excited by current, light, or mechanical forces is determined by the shape of the adsorption potential. The ability to tailor the energy landscape in which a molecule resides at a surface gives the possibility of imposing a desired response, which is of paramount importance for the realization of molecular electronic units. Here, by means of scanning tunneling microscopy, a triazatruxene (TAT) molecule on Ag(111) is studied, which shows a switching behavior characterized by transitions of the molecule between three states, and which is attributed to three energetically degenerate bonding configurations. Upon tunneling current injection, the system can be excited and continuously driven, showing a switching directionality close to 100%. Two surface enantiomers of TAT show opposite switching directions pointing at the chirality of the energy landscape of the adsorption potential as a key ingredient for directional switching. Further, it is shown that by tuning the tunneling parameters, the symmetry of the adsorption potential can be controllably adjusted, leading to a suppression of the directionality or an inversion of the switching direction. The findings represent a molecule‐surface model system exhibiting unprecedented control of the shape of its adsorption potential.
Intra- and intermolecular interactions are dominating chemical processes, and their concerted interplay enables complex nonequilibrium states like life. While the responsible basic forces are typically investigated spectroscopically, a conductance measurement...
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