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Temperature-Dependent Tunneling in Furan Oligomer Single-Molecule Junctions.

Haipeng B LiYan-Feng XiZe-Wen HongJingxian YuXiao-Xia LiWen-Xia LiuLucas DomuleviczShan JinXiao-Shun ZhouJoshua Hihath
Published in: ACS sensors (2021)
Two commonly observed charge transport mechanisms in single-molecule junctions are coherent tunneling and incoherent hopping. It has been generally believed that tunneling processes yield temperature-independent conductance behavior and hopping processes exhibit increasing conductance with increasing temperature. However, it has recently been proposed that tunneling can also yield temperature-dependent transport due to the thermal broadening of the Fermi energy of the contacts. In this work, we examine a series of rigid, planar furan oligomers that are free from a rotational internal degree of freedom to examine the temperature dependence of tunneling transport directly over a wide temperature range (78-300 K). Our results demonstrate conductance transition from a temperature-independent regime to a temperature-dependent regime. By examining various hopping and tunneling models and the correlation between the temperature dependence of conductance and molecular orbital energy offset from the Fermi level, we conclude thermally assisted tunneling is the dominant cause for the onset of temperature-dependent conductance in these systems.
Keyphrases
  • single molecule
  • atomic force microscopy
  • computed tomography
  • diffusion weighted imaging
  • solar cells