Orbital
Control of Photocurrents in Large Area All-Carbon
Molecular Junctions
Posted on 2018-01-10 - 00:00
Photocurrents
generated by illumination of carbon-based molecular
junctions were investigated as diagnostics of how molecular structure
and orbital energies control electronic behavior. Oligomers of eight
aromatic molecules covalently bonded to an electron-beam deposited
carbon surface were formed by electrochemical reduction of diazonium
reagents, with layer thicknesses in the range of 5–12 nm. Illumination
through either the top or bottom partially transparent electrodes
produced both an open circuit potential (OCP) and a photocurrent (PC),
and the polarity and spectrum of the photocurrent depended directly
on the relative positions of the frontier orbitals and the electrode
Fermi level (EF). Electron donors with
relatively high HOMO energies yielded positive OCP and PC, and electron
acceptors with LUMO energies closer to EF than the HOMO energy produced negative OCP and PC. In all cases,
the PC spectrum and the absorption spectrum of the oligomer in the
molecular junction had very similar shapes and wavelength maxima.
Asymmetry of electronic coupling at the top and bottom electrodes
due to differences in bonding and contact area cause an internal potential
gradient which controls PC and OCP polarities. The results provide
a direct indication of which orbital energies are closest to EF and also indicate that transport in molecular
junctions thicker than 5 nm is controlled by the difference in energy
of the HOMO and LUMO orbitals.
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Morteza Najarian, Amin; Bayat, Akhtar; McCreery, Richard L. (2018). Orbital
Control of Photocurrents in Large Area All-Carbon
Molecular Junctions. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/jacs.7b12577