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research article

Portrait of the potential barrier at metal-organic nanocontacts

Vitali, Lucia
•
Levita, Giacomo
•
Ohmann, Robin
Show more
2010
Nature Materials

Electron transport through metal-molecule contacts greatly affects the operation and performance of electronic devices based on organic semiconductors(1-4) and is at the heart of molecular electronics exploiting single-molecule junctions(5-8). Much of our understanding of the charge injection and extraction processes in these systems relies on our knowledge of the potential barrier at the contact. Despite significant experimental and theoretical advances a clear rationale of the contact barrier at the single-molecule level is still missing. Here, we use scanning tunnelling microscopy to probe directly the nanocontact between a single molecule and a metal electrode in unprecedented detail. Our experiments show a significant variation on the submolecular scale. The local barrier modulation across an isolated 4-[trans-2-(pyrid-4-yl-vinyl)] benzoic acid molecule bound to a copper(111) electrode exceeds 1 eV. The giant modulation reflects the interaction between specific molecular groups and the metal and illustrates the critical processes determining the interface potential. Guided by our results, we introduce a new scheme to locally manipulate the potential barrier of the molecular nanocontacts with atomic precision.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1038/NMAT2625
Web of Science ID

WOS:000275901000020

Author(s)
Vitali, Lucia
Levita, Giacomo
Ohmann, Robin
Comisso, Alessio
De Vita, Alessandro
Kern, Klaus  
Date Issued

2010

Published in
Nature Materials
Volume

9

Start page

320

End page

323

Subjects

Interface

•

Surfaces

•

Conductance

•

Microscopy

•

Energetics

•

Junctions

•

Polymers

•

Molecule

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LSEN  
Available on Infoscience
December 16, 2011
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/75647
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