4.5 Article

Electrochemical gate-controlled electron transport of redox-active single perylene bisimide molecular junctions

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSICS-CONDENSED MATTER
Volume 20, Issue 37, Pages -

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/0953-8984/20/37/374122

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Molecular Switches [SPP 1243]
  2. the Volkswagen Foundation
  3. the University of Berne and the Research Center Julich
  4. German Academic Exchange Agency

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We report a scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) experiment in an electrochemical environment which studies a prototype molecular switch. The target molecules were perylene tetracarboxylic acid bisimides modified with pyridine (P-PBI) and methylthiol (T-PBI) linker groups and with bulky tert-butyl-phenoxy substituents in the bay area. At a fixed bias voltage, we can control the transport current through a symmetric molecular wire Au vertical bar P-PBI(T-PBI)vertical bar Au by variation of the electrochemical 'gate' potential. The current increases by up to two orders of magnitude. The conductances of the P-PBI junctions are typically a factor 3 larger than those of T-PBI. A theoretical analysis explains this effect as a consequence of shifting the lowest unoccupied perylene level (LUMO) in or out of the bias window when tuning the electrochemical gate potential VG. The difference in on/off ratios reflects the variation of hybridization of the LUMO with the electrode states with the anchor groups. IT-ES(T) curves of asymmetric molecular junctions formed between a bare Au STM tip and a T-PBI (P-PBI) modified Au(111) electrode in an aqueous electrolyte exhibit a pronounced maximum in the tunneling current at -0.740, which is close to the formal potential of the surface-confined molecules. The experimental data were explained by a sequential two-step electron transfer process.

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