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Atomically Precise Engineering of Single-Molecule Stereoelectronic Effect.

Linan MengNa XinJinying WangJiyu XuShizhao RenZhuang YanMiao ZhangCheng ShenGuangyu ZhangXuefeng GuoShengjie Zhang
Published in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2021)
Charge transport in a single-molecule junction is extraordinarily sensitive to both the internal electronic structure of a molecule and its microscopic environment. Two distinct conductance states of a prototype terphenyl molecule are observed, which correspond to the bistability of outer phenyl rings at each end. An azobenzene unit is intentionally introduced through atomically precise side-functionalization at the central ring of the terphenyl, which is reversibly isomerized between trans and cis forms by either electric or optical stimuli. Both experiment and theory demonstrate that the azobenzene side-group delicately modulates charge transport in the backbone via a single-molecule stereoelectronic effect. We reveal that the dihedral angle between the central and outer phenyl ring, as well as the corresponding rotation barrier, is subtly controlled by isomerization, while the behaviors of the phenyl ring away from the azobenzene are hardly affected. This tunability offers a new route to precisely engineer multiconfigurational single-molecule memories, switches, and sensors.
Keyphrases
  • single molecule
  • atomic force microscopy
  • living cells
  • high resolution
  • genome wide
  • single cell