Long-lived charged states of single porphyrin-tape junctions under ambient conditions
Author(s) -
Edmund Leary,
Georg Kastlunger,
Bart Limburg,
Laura Rincón-García,
Juan Hurtado-Gallego,
M. Teresa González,
Gabino Rubio Bollinger,
Nicolás Agraı̈t,
Simon J. Higgins,
Harry L. Anderson,
Robert Stadler,
Richard J. Nichols
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
nanoscale horizons
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.992
H-Index - 38
eISSN - 2055-6764
pISSN - 2055-6756
DOI - 10.1039/d0nh00415d
Subject(s) - porphyrin , molecular electronics , molecule , charge (physics) , electronics , key (lock) , materials science , terminal (telecommunication) , optoelectronics , nanotechnology , state (computer science) , chemical physics , chemistry , electrical engineering , computer science , physics , telecommunications , engineering , photochemistry , quantum mechanics , computer security , algorithm
The ability to control the charge state of individual molecules wired in two-terminal single-molecule junctions is a key challenge in molecular electronics, particularly in relation to the development of molecular memory and other computational componentry. Here we demonstrate that single porphyrin molecular junctions can be reversibly charged and discharged at elevated biases under ambient conditions due to the presence of a localised molecular eigenstate close to the Fermi edge of the electrodes. In particular, we can observe long-lived charge-states with lifetimes upwards of 1-10 seconds after returning to low bias and large changes in conductance, in excess of 100-fold at low bias. Our theoretical analysis finds charge-state lifetimes within the same time range as the experiments. The ambient operation demonstrates that special conditions such as low temperatures or ultra-high vacuum are not essential to observe hysteresis and stable charged molecular junctions.
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