Quantifying Image Charge Effects in Molecular Tunnel Junctions Based on Self-Assembled Monolayers of Substituted Oligophenylene Ethynylene Dithiols

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES(2021)

Cited 6|Views18
No score
Abstract
A number of factors contribute to orbital energy alignment with respect to the Fermi level in molecular tunnel junctions. Here, we report a combined experimental and theoretical effort to quantify the effect of metal image potentials on the highest occupied molecular orbital to Fermi level offset, epsilon(h), for molecular junctions based on self-assembled monolayers (SAMs) of oligophenylene ethynylene dithiols (OPX) on Au. Our experimental approach involves the use of both transport and photoelectron spectroscopy to extract the offsets, epsilon(trans)(h) and epsilon(UPS)(h), respectively. We take the difference in these quantities to be the image potential energy eV(image). In the theoretical approach, we use density functional theory (DFT) to calculate directly eV(image) between positive charge on an OPX molecule and the negative image charge in the Au. Both approaches yield eV(image) similar to -0.1 eV per metal contact, meaning that the total image potential energy is similar to -0.2 eV for an assembled junction with two Au contacts. Thus, we find that the total image potential energy is 25-30% of the total offset epsilon(h), which means that image charge effects are significant in OPX junctions. Our methods should be generally applicable to understanding image charge effects as a function of molecular size, for example, in a variety of SAM-based junctions.
More
Translated text
Key words
molecular junction, tunneling, charge transport, image charge, Fermi level-HOMO offset, single level model, photoelectron spectroscopy
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined