4.5 Article

Bias-induced reconstruction of hybrid interface states in magnetic molecular junctions

Journal

CHINESE PHYSICS B
Volume 31, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.1088/1674-1056/ac3caf

Keywords

molecular spinterface; hybrid interface states; bias effect

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [11974215, 21933002, 11874242]
  2. Shandong Provincial Natural Science Foundation, China [ZR2019MA043]

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Based on first-principles calculations, the bias-induced evolutions of hybrid interface states in pi-conjugated tricene and in insulating octane magnetic molecular junctions are investigated. Obvious bias-induced splitting and energy shift of the spin-resolved hybrid interface states are observed in the two junctions. The research reveals the phenomenon of bias-induced reconstruction of hybrid interface states in molecular spinterface devices.
Based on first-principles calculations, the bias-induced evolutions of hybrid interface states in pi-conjugated tricene and in insulating octane magnetic molecular junctions are investigated. Obvious bias-induced splitting and energy shift of the spin-resolved hybrid interface states are observed in the two junctions. The recombination of the shifted hybrid interface states from different interfaces makes the spin polarization around the Fermi energy strongly bias-dependent. The transport calculations demonstrate that in the pi-conjugated tricene junction, the bias-dependent hybrid interface states work efficiently for large current, current spin polarization, and distinct tunneling magnetoresistance. But in the insulating octane junction, the spin-dependent transport via the hybrid interface states is inhibited, which is only slightly disturbed by the bias. This work reveals the phenomenon of bias-induced reconstruction of hybrid interface states in molecular spinterface devices, and the underlying role of conjugated molecular orbitals in the transport ability of hybrid interface states.

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