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Anion Stabilization in Electrostatic Environments
Author(s) -
Roberto OlivaresAmaya,
M. Stopa,
Xavier Andrade,
Mark A. Watson,
Alán AspuruGuzik
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
the journal of physical chemistry letters
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.563
H-Index - 203
ISSN - 1948-7185
DOI - 10.1021/jz200120w
Subject(s) - ion , dipole , chemical physics , benzene , electron , charge (physics) , materials science , molecule , perpendicular , chemistry , physics , organic chemistry , quantum mechanics , geometry , mathematics
7 páginas, 6 figuras.Excess charge stabilization of molecules in metallic environments is of particular importance for fields such as molecular electronics and surface chemistry. We study the energetics of benzene and its anion between two metallic plates. We observe that orientational effects are important at small interplate separation. This leads to benzene oriented perpendicular to the gates being more stable than the parallel case due to induced dipole effects. We find that the benzene anion, known for being unstable in the gas phase, is stabilized by the plates at zero bias and an interplate distance of 21 Å. We also observe the effect of benzene under a voltage bias generated by the plates; under a negative bias, the anion becomes destabilized. We use the electron localization function to analyze the changes in electron density due to the bias. These findings suggest that image effects such as those present in nanoscale devices are able to stabilize excess charge and should be important to consider when modeling molecular transport junctions and charge-transfer effects.This work was supported by the Defense Advanced Research Project Agency under Contract No. FA9550-08-1-0285 and the Defense Threat Reduction Agency under Contract No. HDTRA1-10-1-0046. X.A. acknowledges support from the European Community\ude-I3 ETSF project (Contract No. 211956) and “Grupos Consolidados UPV/EHU del Gobierno Vasco” (IT-319-07).Peer reviewe

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