Author:
Stetsovych Vitalii,Feigl Simon,Vranik Radovan,Wit Bareld,Rauls Eva,Nejedlý Jindřich,Šámal Michal,Starý Ivo,Müllegger Stefan
Abstract
AbstractDielectric relaxation lies at the heart of well-established techniques of dielectric spectroscopy essential to diverse fields of research and technology. We report an experimental route for increasing the sensitivity of dielectric spectroscopy ultimately towards the scale of a single molecule. We use the method of radio frequency scanning tunneling microscopy to excite a single molecule junction based on a polar substituted helicene molecule by an electric field oscillating at 2–5 GHz. We detect the dielectric relaxation of the single molecule junction indirectly via its effect of power dissipation, which causes lateral displacement. From our data we determine a corresponding relaxation time of about 300 ps—consistent with literature values of similar helicene derivatives obtained by conventional methods of dielectric spectroscopy.
Funder
European Research Council
Government of the Province of Upper Austria together with Johannes Kepler University Linz
Czech Science Foundation
Institute of Organic Chemistry and Biochemistry of the Czech Academy of Sciences
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
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