Abstract

To study the electronic transport of molecular wire circuits, we present a time-independent scattering formalism which includes an ab initio description of the molecular electronic structure. This allows us to obtain the molecule–metal coupling description at the same level of theory. The conductance of junction α, α′ xylyl dithiol and benzene-1,4-dithiol between gold electrodes is obtained and compared with available experimental data. The conductance depends dramatically on the relative position of the Fermi energy of the metal with respect to the molecular levels. We obtain an estimate for the injecting energy of the electron onto the molecule by varying the distance between the molecule and the attached gold clusters. Contrary to the standard assumption, we find that the injecting energy lies close to the molecular highest occupied molecular orbital, rather than in the middle of the gap; it is just the work function of the bulk metal. Finally, the adequacy of the widely used extended Hückel method for conductance calculations is discussed.

Keywords

ConductanceMolecular wireMolecular orbitalDithiolAb initioMoleculeMolecular electronicsHOMO/LUMOChemical physicsChemistryFermi energyExtended Hückel methodMetalAb initio quantum chemistry methodsMolecular physicsMaterials scienceComputational chemistryElectronCondensed matter physicsPhysicsQuantum mechanics

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Publication Info

Year
1999
Type
article
Volume
111
Issue
15
Pages
6997-7002
Citations
256
Access
Closed

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Sophia N. Yaliraki, Adrián E. Roitberg, César González et al. (1999). The injecting energy at molecule/metal interfaces: Implications for conductance of molecular junctions from an <i>ab initio</i> molecular description. The Journal of Chemical Physics , 111 (15) , 6997-7002. https://doi.org/10.1063/1.480096

Identifiers

DOI
10.1063/1.480096