Molecular Bridge Engineering
for Tuning Quantum Electronic
Transport and Anisotropy in Nanoporous Graphene
Posted on 2023-03-29 - 15:14
Recent advances on surface-assisted synthesis have demonstrated
that arrays of nanometer wide graphene nanoribbons can be laterally
coupled with atomic precision to give rise to a highly anisotropic
nanoporous graphene structure. Electronically, this graphene nanoarchitecture
can be conceived as a set of weakly coupled semiconducting 1D nanochannels
with electron propagation characterized by substantial interchannel
quantum interferences. Here, we report the synthesis of a new nanoporous
graphene structure where the interribbon electronic coupling can be
controlled by the different degrees of freedom provided by phenylene
bridges that couple the conducting channels. This versatility arises
from the multiplicity of phenylene cross-coupling configurations,
which provides a robust chemical knob, and from the interphenyl twist
angle that acts as a fine-tunable knob. The twist angle is significantly
altered by the interaction with the substrate, as confirmed by a combined
bond-resolved scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) and ab initio analysis,
and should accordingly be addressable by other external stimuli. Electron
propagation simulations demonstrate the capability of either switching
on/off or modulating the interribbon coupling by the corresponding
use of the chemical or the conformational knob. Molecular bridges
therefore emerge as efficient tools to engineer quantum transport
and anisotropy in carbon-based 2D nanoarchitectures.
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Moreno, César; Diaz de Cerio, Xabier; Vilas-Varela, Manuel; Tenorio, Maria; Sarasola, Ane; Brandbyge, Mads; et al. (2023). Molecular Bridge Engineering
for Tuning Quantum Electronic
Transport and Anisotropy in Nanoporous Graphene. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/jacs.3c00173