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Selective Fabrication of Single-Molecule Junctions by Interface Engineering.

Biao-Feng ZengGan WangQiao-Zan QianZhi-Xin ChenXia-Guang ZhangZhi-Xing LuShi-Qiang ZhaoAn-Ni FengJia ShiYang YangWenjing Hong
Published in: Small (Weinheim an der Bergstrasse, Germany) (2020)
Recent progress in addressing electrically driven single-molecule behaviors has opened up a path toward the controllable fabrication of molecular devices. Herein, the selective fabrication of single-molecule junctions is achieved by employing the external electric field. For molecular junctions with methylthio (-SMe), thioacetate (-SAc), amine (-NH2 ), and pyridyl (-PY), the evolution of their formation probabilities along with the electric field is extracted from the plateau analysis of individual single-molecule break junction traces. With the increase of the electric field, the SMe-anchored molecules show a different trend in the formation probability compared to the other molecular junctions, which is consistent with the density functional theory calculations. Furthermore, switching from an SMe-anchored junction to an SAc-anchored junction is realized by altering the electric field in a mixed solution. The results in this work provide a new approach to the controllable fabrication and modulation of single-molecule junctions and other bottom-up nanodevices at molecular scales.
Keyphrases
  • single molecule
  • density functional theory
  • atomic force microscopy
  • living cells
  • molecular dynamics
  • tissue engineering
  • low cost
  • high resolution
  • ionic liquid