Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Chemical Shift as a Probe for Single‐Molecule Charge Transport

Author:

Qiao X.1,Sil A.1,Sangtarash S.2,Smith S. M.1,Wu C.13,Robertson C. M.1,Nichols R. J.1,Higgins S. J.1,Sadeghi H.2,Vezzoli A.14ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Chemistry University of Liverpool Crown Street Liverpool L69 7ZD United Kingdom

2. Device Modelling Group, School of Engineering University of Warwick Coventry CV4 7AL United Kingdom

3. Institute of Optoelectronic Materials and Devices, Faculty of Materials Metallurgy and Chemistry Jiangxi University of Science and Technology Ganzhou 341000 China

4. Stephenson Institute for Renewable Energy University of Liverpool Peach Street Liverpool L69 7ZF United Kingdom

Abstract

AbstractExisting modelling tools, developed to aid the design of efficient molecular wires and to better understand their charge‐transport behaviour and mechanism, have limitations in accuracy and computational cost. Further research is required to develop faster and more precise methods that can yield information on how charge transport properties are impacted by changes in the chemical structure of a molecular wire. In this study, we report a clear semilogarithmic correlation between charge transport efficiency and nuclear magnetic resonance chemical shifts in multiple series of molecular wires, also accounting for the presence of chemical substituents. The NMR data was used to inform a simple tight‐binding model that accurately captures the experimental single‐molecule conductance values, especially useful in this case as more sophisticated density functional theory calculations fail due to inherent limitations. Our study demonstrates the potential of NMR spectroscopy as a valuable tool for characterising, rationalising, and gaining additional insights on the charge transport properties of single‐molecule junctions.

Funder

Royal Society

Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council

UK Research and Innovation

Leverhulme Trust

Publisher

Wiley

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