Bias-Driven Conductance Increase with Length in Porphyrin Tapes.
Edmund LearyBart LimburgAsma AlanazySara SangtarashIain GraceKatsutoshi SwadaLouisa J EsdaileMohammed NooriM Teresa GonzálezGabino Rubio-BollingerHatef SadeghiAndrew HodgsonNicolás Agraı TSimon J HigginsColin J LambertHarry L AndersonRichard J NicholsPublished in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2018)
A key goal in molecular electronics has been to find molecules that facilitate efficient charge transport over long distances. Normally, molecular wires become less conductive with increasing length. Here, we report a series of fused porphyrin oligomers for which the conductance increases substantially with length by >10-fold at a bias of 0.7 V. This exceptional behavior can be attributed to the rapid decrease of the HOMO-LUMO gap with the length of fused porphyrins. In contrast, for butadiyne-linked porphyrin oligomers with moderate inter-ring coupling, a normal conductance decrease with length is found for all bias voltages explored (±1 V), although the attenuation factor (β) decreases from ca. 2 nm-1 at low bias to <1 nm-1 at 0.9 V, highlighting that β is not an intrinsic molecular property. Further theoretical analysis using density functional theory underlines the role of intersite coupling and indicates that this large increase in conductance with length at increasing voltages can be generalized to other molecular oligomers.