Electrochemically controlled rectification in symmetric single-molecule junctions

Author:

Wang Zixiao1,Palma Julio L.2ORCID,Wang Hui1,Liu Junzhi3,Zhou Gang4,Ajayakumar M. R.5ORCID,Feng Xinliang5,Wang Wei1,Ulstrup Jens6,Kornyshev Alexei A.7,Li Yueqi8,Tao Nongjian19ORCID

Affiliation:

1. State Key Laboratory of Analytical Chemistry for Life Science, School of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Nanjing University, Nanjing 210023, China

2. Department of Chemistry, Pennsylvania State University, Fayette, The Eberly Campus, Lemont Furnace, PA 15456

3. Department of Chemistry and State Key Laboratory of Synthetic Chemistry, the University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, China

4. Laboratory of Advanced Materials, State Key Laboratory of Molecular Engineering of Polymers, Fudan University, Shanghai 200438, China

5. Centre for Advancing Electronics Dresden, Faculty of Chemistry and Food Chemistry, Technische University Dresden, 01062 Dresden, Germany

6. Department of Chemistry, Technical University of Denmark, Kongens Lyngby 2800, Denmark

7. Department of Chemistry, Imperial College London, Molecular Sciences Research Hub, White City Campus, London W12 0BZ, United Kingdom

8. Center for Bioanalytical Chemistry, University of Science and Technology of China, Hefei 230026, China

9. Center for Bioelectronics and Biosensors, Biodesign Institute and School of Electrical, Energy and Computer Engineering, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ 85287

Abstract

Single-molecule electrochemical science has advanced over the past decades and now extends well beyond molecular imaging, to molecular electronics functions such as rectification and amplification. Rectification is conceptually the simplest but has involved mostly challenging chemical synthesis of asymmetric molecular structures or asymmetric materials and geometry of the two enclosing electrodes. Here we propose an experimental and theoretical strategy for building and tuning in situ (in operando) rectification in two symmetric molecular structures in electrochemical environment. The molecules were designed to conduct electronically via either their lowest unoccupied molecular orbital (LUMO; electron transfer) or highest occupied molecular orbital (HOMO; “hole transfer”). We used a bipotentiostat to control separately the electrochemical potential of the tip and substrate electrodes of an electrochemical scanning tunneling microscope (EC-STM), which leads to independent energy alignment of the STM tip, the molecule, and the STM substrate. By creating an asymmetric energy alignment, we observed single-molecule rectification of each molecule within a voltage range of ±0.5 V. By varying both the dominating charge transporting LUMO or HOMO energy and the electrolyte concentration, we achieved tuning of the polarity as well as the amplitude of the rectification. We have extended an earlier proposed theory that predicts electrolyte-controlled rectification to rationalize all the observed in situ rectification features and found excellent agreement between theory and experiments. Our study thus offers a way toward building controllable single-molecule rectifying devices without involving asymmetric molecular structures.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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