4.6 Article

Conductance Switching in an Organometallic Single-Electron Transistor Using Current-Constrained Reduced-Density Matrix Theory

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY A
Volume 125, Issue 24, Pages 5448-5455

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jpca.1c02267

Keywords

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Funding

  1. ACS Petroleum Research Fund [61644-ND6]
  2. U.S. National Science Foundation [CHE-1565638]

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This study reports the switching of molecular conductance at finite bias in a binuclear organometallic complex and its cation, analyzing their conductance properties using various density matrix theories and methods. Despite some quantitative disagreements, both methods correctly predict a favorable trend in conductance for the cationic partner.
We report switching of molecular conductance at finite bias in a binuclear organometallic complex and its cation which were previously experimentally analyzed at low voltages to see the signature of Kondo resonance. The variational reduced density matrix theory is applied to show that the system is strongly multireferenced especially in its charged form. We also study the molecular conductance of both forms using recently developed current-constrained two-electron reduced density matrix theory which is capable of handling strong electronic correlation. We compare the results against an uncorrelated 1-electron reduced density matrix version of conductance calculations using Hartree-Fock molecular orbitals. We observe that despite quantitative disagreements, the qualitative trend in the conductance is correctly predicted to be favorable for the cationic partner by both methods. We explain the results using the inherently high density of states for the low-lying excited states in the cationic partner which is also replicable from uncorrelated electronic structure methods. Our results not only indicate that the low-bias conductance trend is maintained even beyond the Kondo regime and produces quantitative agreement with that of the experiment but also identifies important physical markers that are responsible for the high conductance of the charged species.

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