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  3. Quantum Interference-Controlled Conductance Enhancement in Stacked Graphene-like Dimers.
 

Quantum Interference-Controlled Conductance Enhancement in Stacked Graphene-like Dimers.

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BORIS DOI
10.48350/171783
Date of Publication
August 31, 2022
Publication Type
Article
Division/Institute

Departement für Chemi...

Contributor
Li, Peihui
Hou, Songjun
Alharbi, Bader
Wu, Qingqing
Chen, Yijian
Zhou, Li
Gao, Tengyang
Li, Ruihao
Yang, Lan
Chang, Xinyue
Dong, Gang
Liu, Xunshan
Departement für Chemie, Biochemie und Pharmazie (DCBP)
Decurtins, Silvio
Departement für Chemie, Biochemie und Pharmazie (DCBP)
Liu, Shi-Xiaorcid-logo
Departement für Chemie, Biochemie und Pharmazie (DCBP)
Hong, Wenjing
Lambert, Colin J
Jia, Chuancheng
Guo, Xuefeng
Subject(s)

500 - Science::570 - ...

500 - Science::540 - ...

000 - Computer scienc...

Series
Journal of the American Chemical Society
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
0002-7863
Publisher
American Chemical Society
Language
English
Publisher DOI
10.1021/jacs.2c05909
PubMed ID
35930760
Description
Stacking interactions are of significant importance in the fields of chemistry, biology, and material optoelectronics because they determine the efficiency of charge transfer between molecules and their quantum states. Previous studies have proven that when two monomers are π-stacked in series to form a dimer, the electrical conductance of the dimer is significantly lower than that of the monomer. Here, we present a strong opposite case that when two anthanthrene monomers are π-stacked to form a dimer in a scanning tunneling microscopic break junction, the conductance increases by as much as 25 in comparison with a monomer, which originates from a room-temperature quantum interference. Remarkably, both theory and experiment consistently reveal that this effect can be reversed by changing the connectivity of external electrodes to the monomer core. These results demonstrate that synthetic control of connectivity to molecular cores can be combined with stacking interactions between their π systems to modify and optimize charge transfer between molecules, opening up a wide variety of potential applications ranging from organic optoelectronics and photovoltaics to nanoelectronics and single-molecule electronics.
Handle
https://boris-portal.unibe.ch/handle/20.500.12422/86543
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FileFile TypeFormatSizeLicensePublisher/Copright statementContent
jacs.2c05909.pdftextAdobe PDF4.22 MBpublisherpublished restricted
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