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Kim, BongSoo
Polymer & Organic Semiconductor Lab.
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Measuring relative barrier heights in molecular electronic junctions with transition voltage spectroscopy

Author(s)
Beebe, Jeremy M.Kim, BongSooFrisbie, C. DanielKushmerick, James G.
Issued Date
2008-05
DOI
10.1021/nn700424u
URI
https://scholarworks.unist.ac.kr/handle/201301/24827
Fulltext
https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/nn700424u
Citation
ACS NANO, v.2, no.5, pp.827 - 832
Abstract
Though molecular devices exhibiting potentially useful electrical behavior have been demonstrated, a deep understanding of the factors that influence charge transport in molecular electronic junctions has yet to be fully realized. Recent work has shown that a mechanistic transition occurs from direct tunneling to field emission in molecular electronic devices. The magnitude of the voltage required to enact this transition is molecule-specific, and thus measurement of the transition voltage constitutes a form of spectroscopy. Here we determine that the transition voltage for a series of alkanethiol molecules is invariant with molecular length, while the transition voltage of a conjugated molecule depends directly on the manner in which the conjugation pathway has been extended. Finally, by examining the transition voltage as a function of contact metal, we show that this technique can be used to determine the dominant charge carrier for a given molecular junction.
Publisher
AMER CHEMICAL SOC
ISSN
1936-0851
Keyword (Author)
molecular electronicscharge transporttunnelingtransitionvoltage spectroscopy
Keyword
SELF-ASSEMBLED MONOLAYERSMETAL WORK FUNCTIONCONTACT RESISTANCECHARGE-TRANSPORTLEVEL ALIGNMENTWIRESGOLDALKANETHIOLSCONDUCTANCEACCESS

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