4.8 Review

Silane and Germane Molecular Electronics

Journal

ACCOUNTS OF CHEMICAL RESEARCH
Volume 50, Issue 4, Pages 1088-1095

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.accounts.7b00059

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [CHE-1404922]
  2. NSF [11-44155]
  3. Semiconductor Research Corporation
  4. New York Center for Advanced Interconnect Science and Technology Program

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CONSPECTUS: This Account provides an overview of our recent efforts to uncover the fundamental charge transport properties of Si-Si and Ge-Ge single bonds and introduce useful functions into group 14 molecular wires. We utilize the tool's of chemical synthesis and a scanning tunneling microscopy-based break-junction technique to study the mechanism of charge transport in these molecular systems. We evaluated the fundamental ability of silicon, germanium, and carbon molecular wires to transport charge by comparing conductances within families of well-defined structures, the members of which differ only in the number of Si (or Ge or C) atoms in the wire. For each family, this procedure yielded a length-dependent conductance decay parameter, beta. Comparison of the different beta values demonstrates that Si-Si and Ge-Ge a bonds are more conductive than the analogous C C a bonds. These molecular trends mirror what is seen in the bulk. The conductance decay of Si and Ge-based wires is similar in magnitude to those from pi-based molecular wires such as para-phenylenes However, the chemistry of the linkers that attach the molecular wires to the electrodes has a large influence on the resulting beta value. For example, Si- and Ge-based wires of many different lengths connected with a methyl-thiomethyl linker give beta values of 0.36-0.39 angstrom(-1), whereas Si- and Ge-based wires connected with aryl thiornethyl groups give drastically different beta values for short and long wires. This observation inspired us to study molecular wires: thatare composed of both pi- and sigma-orbitals. The sequence and composition of group 14 atoms in the sigma chain modulates the electronic coupling between the pi end-groups and dictates the molecular conductance. The conductance behavior originates from the coupling between the subunits, which can be understood by considering periodic trends such as bond length, polarizability, and bond polarity. We found that the same periodic trends determine the electric field-induced breakdown properties of individual Si-Si, Ge-Ge, Si-O, Si-C, and C-C bonds. Building from these studies, we have prepared a system that has two different, alternative conductance pathways. In this wire, we can intentionally break a labile, strained silicon silicon bond and thereby shunt the current through the secondary conduction pathway. This type of in situ bond-rupture provides a new tool to study single molecule reactions that are induced by electric fields. Moreover, these studies provide guidance for designing dielectric materials as well as molecular devices that require stability under high voltage bias. The fundamental studies on the structure/function relationships of the molecular wires have guided the design of new functional systems based on the Si- and Ge-based wires. For example, we exploited the principle of strain-induced Lewis acidity from reaction chemistry to design a single molecule switch that can be controllably switched between two conductive states by varying the distance between the tip and substrate electrodes. We found that the strain intrinsic to the disilaacenaphthene scaffold also creates two state conductance switching. Finally, we demonstrate the first example of a stereoelectronic conductance switch, and we demonstrate that the switching relies crucially on the electronic delocalization in Si-Si and Ge-Ge wire backbones. These studies illustrate the untapped potential in using Si- and Ge-based wires to design and control charge transport at the nanoscale and to allow quantum mechanics to be used as a tool to design ultraminiaturized switches.

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