Transport Properties of a Single-Molecule Diode
Citations Over TimeTop 10% of 2012 papers
Abstract
Charge transport through single diblock dipyrimidinyl diphenyl molecules consisting of a donor and acceptor moiety was measured in the low-bias regime and as a function of bias at different temperatures using the mechanically controllable break-junction technique. Conductance histograms acquired at 10 mV reveal two distinct peaks, separated by a factor of 1.5, representing the two orientations of the single molecule with respect to the applied bias. The current-voltage characteristics exhibit a temperature-independent rectification of up to a factor of 10 in the temperature range between 300 and 50 K with single-molecule currents of 45-70 nA at ±1.5 V. The current-voltage characteristics are discussed using a semiempirical model assuming a variable coupling of the molecular energy levels as well as a nonsymmetric voltage drop across the molecular junction, thus shifting the energy levels accordingly. The excellent agreement of the data with the proposed model suggests that the rectification originates from an asymmetric Coulomb blockade in combination with an electric-field-induced level shifting.
Related Papers
- → Measurement and understanding of single-molecule break junction rectification caused by asymmetric contacts(2014)45 cited
- → Strong Tunneling in the Single-Electron Transistor(1997)100 cited
- → Single-electron Coulomb blockade in a nanometer field-effect transistor with a single barrier(1992)23 cited
- → Molecular break-junctions: interaction with light and conductance switching(2005)